Word: herr
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...shares the suite with Brown’s girlfriend, said in a phone interview with The Crimson that she felt particularly targeted because a pink triangle, an anti-gay symbol with historical ties to Nazism, was drawn on her door. Rubin-Vega and her suitemate, senior Cassie C. Herr, both said they thought Searles did not take the vandalism seriously. “I am pretty sure he thought he was playing a joke,” said Rubin-Vega. The New York Police Department arrested Brown and Searles on December 2. and were charged with criminal mischief...
...fact perhaps the only students made to feel truly vulnerable were those who did not immediately decry the vandalism incident. One of the victims of the “hate crime,” Cassie Herr, a roommate of the girlfriend in question, comfortably played the race card at a rally deriding the events. “I don’t see enough white faces,” she said. “We are the majority and…it is our job to make sure that everyone…feels supported here.” Apparently this...
...razor-sharp trousers for men. At Hans Peter Reuker's eponymous boutique, tel: (49-40) 439 3256, body-hugging jackets and sweaters are the big menswear sellers, alongside flowing skirts and blouses for the ladies. Traditionalists can meanwhile satiate their appetite for British-style men's suits at Herr von Eden, tel: (49-40) 439 0057, or nip across to Recession by Marla, tel: (49-40) 1801 8970, which specializes in flapper fashions and a bountiful selection of fishnets from the roaring...
...were staring at a fresh crop of campaign posters plastered on the station's walls. They portrayed her husband, Wolfgang, a steelworker and union shop steward at ThyssenKrupp Stahl, in his silver blast-furnace smock and hard hat. The real surprise was not the larger-than-life apparition of Herr Teusch and his frayed walrus moustache, but the poster's message: an endorsement from this lifelong Social Democrat of the opposition Christian Democratic Union (cdu). "Did you see the poster? How can anyone who works at Thyssen join that party?" Angela says, recalling the outrage of her colleagues that...
Some students spoke out in favor of Hanfstaengl’s appearance, notably the editorial staff of The Crimson. In a June 13, 1934 editorial, Crimson editors argued that “if Herr Hanfstaengl is to be received at all, it should be with the marks of honor appropriate to his high position in the government of a friendly country.” The Crimson also referred to Nazi Germany in an editorial as a “great and proud nation...