Word: grunwald
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...stereotype of the UC member is that of a gov-jock (never mind the fact that the former Chair was an E.P.S. major) anxious to forge his political career to the senate as soon as possible. The typical UC representative is according to Michael Grunwald's Oct. 18 opinion piece, a power-hungry student just looking for some piquant victual to place on his c.v. Members fitting this description are the ones most likely to resign...
...much of a compliment to be told that all the time and effort you and friends of yours spent for the good of your community isn't "so lame this year." Nor does it help to have people like Michael Grunwald write opinion pieces entitled "Lame, Lame, Lame," spewing the hackneyed anti-UC party-line, before even two UC meetings of the new year have taken place. To tell the truth, I think people must be bored by now of all the same old UC-bashing Crimson editorials. The Crimson would have much more original editorials if, for once...
Michael R. Grunwald '92, the editorial chair of The Crimson, tossed his potato coins while watching Nightline last Thursday night...
Time, Newsweek and The New Republic insist on speaking of the election as if it were already over. David Letterman, Jay Leno and Johnny Carson resort to Democratic futility jokes whenever they hit a lull. In The Crimson, ("George Bush and the Seven Dwarves," Sept. 18), Michael R. Grunwald wrote: "Beat Bush/Quayle? The Dems couldn't beat Bush/Hitler...
...bored this evening so I took a few minutes to read The Crimson. I was diappointed to read Michael Grunwald's editorial (September 16) about Alan Caruba, king of the anti-boredom campaign. I like being bored and I'm not the slightest bit embarrassed by it. There's nothing I can think of that's more fun than waking up late on a Sunday, reading the paper, taking a long nap, watching a golf tournament on TV and calling it an early night...