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Word: hungerers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...issue here is not politics, but good and evil. And we must never confuse them, for I have seen the SS at work and I have seen their victims . . . Sons watched helplessly their fathers being beaten to death. Mothers watched their children die of hunger. There was . . . terror, fear, isolation, torture, gas chambers, flames, flames rising to the heavens...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: V-E Day: A Misbegotten Trip Opens Old Wounds | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

...Germans had surrendered came over the prisoners' long-secret radio. The French began singing the Marseillaise. "There was the joy of being alive, but it was mixed with much sadness," Hallery says. "Two hundred to three hundred people a day were still dying in the camp, from exhaustion and hunger. There were bodies everywhere." Hallery went to the infirmary where one of his friends lay nearing the end. "I know I'm finished," the friend said, "but I want you to tell my wife one thing. Tell her I had the joy of knowing the war is over." -- By Otto...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: V-E Day: There Was Such a Feeling of Joy | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

...It’s hunger for whatever it is that the Times confers on people,” he says. “For me, writing for the Times was like being a really ugly person who’d inherited a lot of money...

Author: By Michael A. Mohammed, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Chilling With Elvis, The Controversial Charmer | 4/8/2005 | See Source »

More recently, the cause for a living wage was taken up at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., where a nine-day long hunger strike succeeded last month in convincing the University to implement a living wage program for its workers...

Author: By Kristina M. Moore, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Wash U Students Sit In for Living Wage | 4/8/2005 | See Source »

...population will age, the old will die, the young will grow old, technology will continue to spread in our society and throughout the world, and inevitably (barring a resurgent neo-Luddite movement) within 30 years we will all be playing video games. There is no evidence that this hunger within us will ever die, even as our bodies age. And who would want it to? Nothing beats the rapid-fire thrill of a first person shooter, or the evocations and exhilarations of a sports game, or the alternating states of calm cerebral alertness and frantic applied engagement that characterizes more...

Author: By Jorian P. Schutz, | Title: You Are What You Play | 4/8/2005 | See Source »

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