Word: hating
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...most Spaniards. We were ready a long time ago to lay him to rest. He and his supporters, an insignificant minority of Spaniards, do not play any role in current Spanish politics. You included with your story a photo of supporters of the nationalistic Falange party that was captioned "Hate Wave." Why? There isn't any wave of hate in Spain. David J. Santos Madrid Bitter Harvest Simon Robinson's article "The Farm Fight" [Nov. 28] pointed out a real problem faced by developing countries: the World Trade Organization's inability to persuade the U.S. and European countries to curb...
...Park. "You know what my least favorite John Lennon song is?" he says. "Imagine. At the root of it is some rigorous thinking about the way things could be, but people have stolen the idea and made it an anthem for wishful thinking. I'm against wishful thinking. I hate...
...Lovin’ ‘Hate Crimes’” (column, Dec. 13), John Hastrup critiques the response to a recent hate-motivated incident of vandalism at Columbia. He then applies this criticism to Harvard’s previous outcry against a “minor altercation” that left a gay student hospitalized last spring. Hastrup raises an important point: people should think twice before inappropriately labeling expressions or actions as hate speech or hate crimes. However, to label these campus responses as “misplaced outrage” to incidents that are supposedly...
Even at liberal universities, incidents of hate are not “small, isolated occurrences.” They happen more frequently than people assume, and, as Hastrup concedes, their effects extend beyond individual victims. All minority students, and especially queer students, were sent a frightening message last spring when a fellow student was beaten near a queer dance party on Harvard’s campus. Any one of the hundreds of queer and non-queer students who attended the dance could have been the victim. It is simply unfathomable how Hastrup can label this crime as an isolated occurrence...
...mind is constantly wandering off,' he says. 'If they ever want to evolve a way of picking out the prospective novelists among children, this would be the aspect to go for, this drifting off' ... After attending [an English public] school, Fowles served in the British marines, which he hated. 'I also began to hate what I was becoming in life-a British Establishment young hopeful. I decided instead to become a sort of anarchist.' Toward this end, he turned to writing, supporting himself for 15 years with teaching jobs ... 'I'm a great believer in natural organic growth. You grow...