Word: hating
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During her time at the University of Wisconsin, she launched both an aggressive anti-hate speech campaign and a plan to double the number of minority undergraduates at the school...
...season hitting percentage of .439, while sophomore Erik Kuld paced the Crimson offense with 4.05 kills per game, the 19th-highest mark in the country. Weintraub was No. 1 in the country with an average of .564 serving aces per game.“You really hate to see starters leave you, but when seniors leave, that opens up the opportunity for younger guys to step it up, and I have 100 percent confidence in our rising sophomores and incoming freshmen,” Weintraub said.—Staff writer Courtney D. Skinner can be reached at cskinner@fas.harvard.edu...
...block,” Brand said. “In the Ivy League, we’re certainly going to be contending for the championship on both the men’s and women’s sides. We’re definitely going to have a chance. I hate to predict, but on paper we look much stronger.” —Staff writer Madeleine I. Shapiro can be reached at mshapiro@fas.harvard.edu...
...intensely do France's conservatives hate the 35-hour work-week that they're willing to work twice as much every week to do away with it. The problem is that the country's trade unions are as ferociously committed to defending it as an entitlement, leaving the government of President Nicolas Sarkozy appearing to speak from both sides of its mouth on the politically-charged issue. And amid the cacophony and confusion, employees remain suspicious that the government is seeking to extend the working week by stealth...
...people and their anti-American sloganeering were as ineffective as their bombs. But they did real harm. Their victims were liberals: the millions of people who were part of the mainstream antiwar movement and who later voted against Ronald Reagan. These people opposed the Vietnam War but didn't hate their country. They were horrified by violence and sincerely wanted the war to end. They believed in democracy, even when dismayed by the result. The slogan of the Underground, by contrast, was "Bring the war home." For strategic and psychological reasons, the Underground wanted the Vietnam...