Word: moralizers
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Last week, I decided to ignore all of my moral and ethical beliefs and enter a Final Club party. It was a Friday night, I was completely bored and besides a riveting session with e-mail, no other social opportunities presented themselves. Admittedly, I was a little concerned with how my entrance into one of the clubs would be perceived. Although I know some people who are members of this particular club, they are not really friends of mine or even good acquaintances. In fact, I pride myself on the fact that I am not a part of the "finals...
Group formation and identity is one of those confusing, complex issues that undergraduates tend to either ignore or leave to abstract, overindulgent conversations in Government or Moral Reasoning Section. Perhaps the only time that students think seriously about group formation and how it applies to their experience at the college is during the dreaded blocking time for first-years in which they scramble to pare down their 30 friends into a legitimate 16-person blocking group. I doubt that this college has ever seen the month of March pass by in the Yard without hurt feelings and irrevocably broken friendships...
This is a man who maintained his moral character and revolutionary zeal for freedom and justice through nearly three decades of imprisonment. He emerged from that ordeal, not with hatred in his heart but with an unshakable commitment and the superb political skill to lead his nation...
Nicholi's lecture "The Scientific Method and the Moral Law" was the first in a series of three lectures examining the conflicting world-views of Sigmund Freud and C. S. Lewis. The lectures will continue tonight and tomorrow night in Memorial Church...
...impeachment inquiry -- splitting 21-16, strictly along party lines -- President Clinton's fate will be sealed by a full floor vote due later this week. Not in terms of the probe itself; Republicans have more than enough votes to make that happen. Rather, it's a question of moral legitimacy: Will 50 or 60 Dems cross the aisle in a show of bipartisanship, as they did for the release of the Starr report? Or will it be no more than a handful, signaling open warfare between the parties and burying comparisons with 1974 once...