Word: mathews
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News Editor for This Issue: Kristin A. Goss '87 Night Editors: Kristin A. Goss '87 David S. Hilzenrath '87 Peter J. Howe '86 Joseph F Kahn '87 Jeffrey P. Meier '89 Brooke A. Masters '89 Mathew A. Saal '87 Daniel B. Wroblewski '86 Editorial Editor: Nicholas S. Wurf '87 City/State Editor: D. Joseph Menn '87 Copy Editor: Joseph H. Kaufman '89 Photo Editor: Wan Joon Kim '87 Sports Editor: Jonathan F. Putnam '88 Business Editor: Wayne A. Seaton...
Kristin A. Goss '87 Night Editors: David S. Hilzenrath '87 Joseph F. Kahn '87 Brooke A. Masters '89 Mathew A. Saal '87 Editorial Editor: J. Andrew Mendelsohn '87 Feature Editor: Victoria G. T. Bassetti '86-'87 Copy Editor: Teresa L. Johnson '89 Photo Editor: Christopher A. Wilson '86 Sports Editor: Jessica A. Dorman '88 Jonathan F. Putnam '88 Business Editor: John P. Siracuse...
...extracts from Pope's Dunciad, Rape of the Lock, Essay on Man, and assorted Epistles and Elegles. Johnson's Vanity of Human Wishes is printed in full, as are Swift's Description of the Morning and his Verses On The Death Of Doctor Swift. There are generous selections from Mathew Prior, Isaac Watts, John Gay, Thomas Gray, Oliver Goldsmith, Christopher Smart, Robert Burns, and William Blake, and an appropriately limited one from that misplaced Poet Laureate Colley Cibber. Lonsdale has often embellished Smith's selections from deserving poets like William Cowper and the dazzling and vitriolic Charles Churchill...
Perhaps that was what drove him now, in another pitching dimension. When he started, he was chasing Mathew son. Johnson and Koufas, but they were still ahead of him and would be forever...
...brought up among other prosperous Blacks and whites, and she naturally assumes many of their values. When her older brother brings home a Jewish classmate, the scene resembles "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner?" with a twist. The Black parents resent the white woman, but Sarah's brother Mathew retorts by pointing out that they should have expected an interracial affair. The problem is that these privileged Philadelphia Negroes would like their children to marry other nice colored people, a prospect Sarah and Mathew find excruciatingly dull...