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Sophomore Alexis Martire led Margaret Purcell 6-4, 4-1, while senior Sanja Bajin trailed Biffy Kaufman 5-6 (4), 6-2 and Cao Minh trailed Stephanie White...

Author: By John R. Hein, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Shorthanded W. Tennis Falls to Yale at ECACs | 10/15/2002 | See Source »

Freshman Lyly Cao Minh defeated her first-round opponent, Celene Change from Princeton, but lost in the next round...

Author: By John R. Hein, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Bergman-Lingman, Wang Advance In ITA Prequalifying | 10/7/2002 | See Source »

...perturbed Vietnam's censors. Authorities may bar Duong from acting for five years for taking part in the movie, which is banned in the communist country because it paints the North Vietnamese as merciless killers. Duong is guilty of "distorting the history of Vietnam," according to Ho Chi Minh City Culture and Information Department officials, who dislike the movie's depiction of the November, 1965 battle of Ia Drang as a U.S. victory. Vietnamese historians say their side won the battle, the first face-off between the U.S. Army and NVA regulars...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Yet Another Casualty of A Lousy War | 9/16/2002 | See Source »

...unwilling or unable to expunge repetition from one interview to the next) on American atrocities from Vietnam (which, in his opinion, "began as a U.S. attack against South Vietnam, which was always the main target of the U.S. wars," - a statement that would have been news to Ho Chi Minh) to Nicaragua and Sudan, among others. Unlike Vidal, however, Chomsky is not concerned with the possibility of civil liberties in the U.S. being eroded in the aftermath of 9-11 ("I do not think it will lead to a long-term restriction of rights internally in any serious sense...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Three Books About 9/11 | 6/5/2002 | See Source »

...first time Nguyen Thanh Hien encountered the dragon lady he was walking dejectedly away from the U.S. consulate in Ho Chi Minh City. In his pocket he carried a letter from U.S. officials that stated, incredulously: "You do not have the physical appearance characteristic of Amerasians." That contradicted sharply with what Hien saw in the mirror when he shaved his thick stubble, or looked at the dense hair on his arms and chest. It also contradicted what Vietnamese society saw-and widely disparaged. Almost from the moment he was born, Hien had been reviled as a bui doi or "dust...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Children of the Dust | 5/13/2002 | See Source »

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