Word: hates
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...attack was a reminder that six years after Milosevic's fall, Serbia is becoming increasingly violent, and virulent nationalism is on the rise again. There have been more than 100 politically motivated assaults in the past three months alone, and hate speech is increasingly common in the media and politics. The targets are human-rights activists, journalists and politicians who dare to stand up against the nationalists. One reason for the nationalist revival is the U.N.'s push toward independence for Kosovo, a province mostly populated by ethnic Albanians, but cherished as a historic heartland by most Serbs. Another...
...casual” approach to advising is.“I definitely see it as an issue of people just not realizing that it’s a job,” PAF Mariah F. Peebles ’09 says. “I hate calling it a job…a responsibility.”She does think, however, that as the training and application process becomes more difficult the program will eventually become more self-selecting as students realize the commitment difference from the prefect program.“I think that the expected investment and involvement...
...father's (and grandmother's) loving disposition, but Ana Luisa still resents and recoils from her. "Why didn't God send me a white and blond girl?" she demands. "I would've loved her so much." (And Mercé asks, "What did black people do to make you hate us so much?") Desperate for affection from her mother, Belén puts pancake makeup on her face, saying, "I want to be white so mama will love me." Ana Luisa sees this pathetic travesty, and kisses Belén for the first time...
This unscripted strategy might sound like a big risk--there's nothing stopping the volunteers from saying they hate a product. But despite the conventional wisdom that consumers are much more likely to voice complaints than praise, recent research finds the opposite. In one study, Andrea Wojnicki, an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Toronto, looked at self-styled experts and found that they were likely to keep negative experiences to themselves, lest their skill--at, say, picking a restaurant--be called into question...
...said Jamison, whose appearance was part of Mental Health Awareness Month, co-sponsored by the Undergraduate Council (UC) and the Mental Health Awareness and Advocacy Group (MHAAG). But “coming out” for Jamison wasn’t easy. She said she still receives hate letters, some from evangelical Christians who blame her illness on insufficient prayer. Erika L. Tschinkel ’09 said she was impressed with Jamison’s talk. “She’s a real warrior, with all the things she’s been through. She?...