Word: malcolms
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...council's Malcolm A. Heinicke '93 and the Task Force's Janet A. Viggiani formulate a compromise definition...
Fall Council Chair Malcolm A. Heinicke '93, one of the principal authors of the amended constitution and bylaws, says the idea for the council's reevaluation committee, an internal board devised to examine the council, stemmed from the "unfortunate" election scandal involving former Vice Chair Maya G. Prabhu '94. "That was really a cue to move forward," Heinicke says...
...MALCOLM A. HEINICKE '93 FORMER UNDERGRADUATE COUNCIL CHAIR can move...
...America a fixation on assassination conspiracies? After all, the latest furor over who really killed J.F.K., inspired by Oliver Stone's movie, has only recently abated. There remain rabid challenges to official versions of the Martin Luther King and Malcolm X murders. To sociologist Amitai Etzioni, the fascination with these questions reflects a need to explain life's inexplicable dark side: Why did all these heroes die? That tendency is encouraged by America's individualism, which encourages an instinctive distrust of authority and officialdom...
Like many a talented nonfiction writer, Malcolm has come to think of herself as an artist. Her narratives proclaim her a storyteller, not just a fact gatherer. Without that gift and some measure of literary license -- with only a daily newspaper's flat objectivity -- a 48,500-word profile would be unbearable. Perhaps she could make a case for broadening the boundaries of "responsible journalism." She has not. Her defense is that her quotations are literal. They ought to be. Writers use the quoted word because it has a special piquancy -- the sacred appeal of being, in an often shadowy...