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Jonathan H. Saltzman, a reporter who covered the Barrett trial for the Providence Journal-Bulletin and is currently covering the Pring-Wilson tiral for the Boston Globe, says a complex town-gown relationship also existed in the Providence area...

Author: By Hana R. Alberts, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: A Parallel Case? | 9/24/2004 | See Source »

...uncertain times, we are facing an enemy like no other: an idea unleashed in the reality of wounded peoples. We are facing an enemy who has managed to include suicide in his definition of victory, managed to infiltrate the hearts of hundreds of thousands of young men across the globe and hence managed to surpass our capacity to contain...

Author: By Mohammed Herzallah, | Title: Not Just Another Placebo | 9/23/2004 | See Source »

It’s mid-September, and school has resumed. Harvard students return from their travels, vacations and thesis projects around the globe. We spent last week unpacking our belongings and digging futons out of storage. The parental units are gone, and with a day left of summer, it seems as though the last strains of a saccharine melody are still ringing in our ears. The clock above the Citizens’ Bank proclaims the minutes and hours to our little world—a beacon to students late for class and a constant reminder of the exacting pace...

Author: By Elena Sorokin, ELENA P. SOROKIN | Title: September in the Square | 9/21/2004 | See Source »

...report last week, the Boston Globe zeroed in on a document showing that before Bush moved to Cambridge, Mass., in 1973 to attend Harvard Business School, he pledged to register with a local unit. In 1999 his spokesman Dan Bartlett told the Washington Post that Bush had indeed done so. Bartlett told TIME last week he had misspoken. Bush never registered locally. But he did not have to, Bartlett now claims, because the military's central registry in Denver knew his whereabouts. It remains unclear, however, what exactly the registration rules were at the time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Campaign '04: Tug-Of-War: The X Files Of Lt. Bush | 9/20/2004 | See Source »

DIED. RICHARD BUTLER, 86, white supremacist who in the early 1970s founded a 20-acre compound in rural Idaho called the Aryan Nations, spawning chapters in a dozen states and contacts with neo-Nazis around the globe; in Hayden, Idaho. Dubbed "the elder statesman of hate" by civil rights advocates, the former aerospace engineer housed a spectrum of right-wing extremists, some of whom would later be convicted of racially motivated crimes. Butler himself claimed he was against violence, however, and operated relatively unhindered until he was bankrupted by a $6.3 million lawsuit in 2001--stemming from a 1998 incident...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Sep. 20, 2004 | 9/20/2004 | See Source »

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