Word: hating
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Arafat's visit should give us pause. We stand at a crossroads; we all hope a brighter future awaits the Middle East. But this future will not come about by itself. It will take hard work by leaders like Arafat to undo a legacy of hate that has poisoned relations for the past few decades. We hope that he will work in good faith with Israel and with his people in order to secure a lasting and real peace to a region that so desperately needs it. --Ethan Tucker '97 Chair, Harvard-Radcliffe Hillel Yuval Segal '97 Dalia Trachtenberg...
...itself from the international scene. Throughout the 1970s and '80s, the PRC began to regain its confidence in playing a major role in global affairs, using mainly its physical power drawn from vast land and a huge population to impress the world as some tough guy whom you might hate but just can't ignore. In the meantime, Taiwan broke away from the illusion of fighting back, nearly stopped calling itself "Republic of China" in public and instead placed the focal point on its domestic development. And before long the economic performances of this "Little Dragon" were magnificent enough...
...impresario of powerful, conflicting emotions, Farrakhan orchestrates pride and rage, love and hate, raising his revival tent on the twin poles of black self-reliance and white race baiting. If anyone was tempted to forget that, amid all the hopeful talk of healing and atonement--and plenty of moderate blacks who saw in the march a desperately needed chance for spiritual renewal clearly were tempted--Farrakhan made it impossible. In an interview released late last week he repeated some of his favorite calumnies against the Jews--"bloodsuckers," as he called them, who exploit blacks and "were involved in the slave...
...Jackson, who may fear being eclipsed by Farrakhan, joined the march without hesitation, but others, from Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke to the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, offered exquisitely calibrated statements of support that distinguished the march from its organizer. "I don't accept hate-filled, antiwhite, anti-Semitic language coming from anybody," Schmoke said, but he would be marching "because I think it is an important event [that] will probably be seen as significant in the history of African Americans." Still others, such as mayors Marc Morial of New Orleans and Michael White...
...Bettmann sold his business to a small publishing firm and retired to Florida. For him, the sale was an occasion of satisfaction without sentiment."I hate nostalgia," he said, "but I've made a hell of a living from it." So have his successors, who have continued to make the Bettmann credit line ubiquitous in print. Now a few taps on the computer keyboard will bring it to the screen. That prospect pleases the 92-year-old Bettmann, who pronounced himself delighted "to have seen my original acorn nourished and cultivated into a formidable digitized...