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...identifying the urgent need for strong pro-choice action at Harvard and beyond (“Have Pro-Choicers Aborted Ship? op-ed, Jan. 4). At this very moment, reproductive rights are in grave danger. This threat is illustrated by the nomination of anti-choice Samuel Alito to our nation??s highest court and the refusal of pharmacies to stock or dispense emergency contraception, an Food and Drug Administratoin-approved medication that prevents unintended pregnancies and, thus, subsequent abortions. It is at this critical moment that Harvard needs a strong pro-choice lobby. Unfortunately, due to a turnover...
...team. We know that. We’ve made mistakes, but we’ve grown. We feel good going into this.” Harvard currently rides a two-game win streak, thanks to a convincing victory against Colgate that followed a win over Binghamton, one of the nation??s best offensive teams. Those efforts concluded the holidays with a positive spin after the team had lost eight in a row, the Crimson’s worst such streak since 1983-84. Harvard has finally begun to hit its stride. “We have some momentum...
...refusal of the nation??s largest retailer to carry a perfectly safe means to prevent a pregnancy builds nicely upon the current national mood. One need only glance at the news to find ample evidence of America’s slide to the right on reproductive issues. The Food and Drug Administration’s refusal to approve EC for over-the-counter sale in the face of scientific consensus, the Democratic Party’s endorsement of pro-life candidate Robert Casey Jr. to oppose Rick Santorum, R-Penn., President Bush’s appointment of strongly...
...justification for fairly extensive powers, or a truism meant only to open the second article, no more, no less. All that is left, then, that could justify the President’s action is his constitutional designation as Commander-in-Chief, except that this designation applies only to the nation??s military, and its invocation implies that Bush is using his military powers against American citizens—a scary proposition indeed...
...source, over roast beef and asparagus at the Institute of Politics, suggests that Woodward knows—or, in journalistic parlance, “has heard”—more than he has previously acknowledged. Still, it is far from clear how deep into the nation??s capital his knowledge extends. Is Woodward far ahead of his peers on this Washington scandal, as he and Bernstein were when they uncovered Watergate in the Nixon administration? Or is Woodward too close to his sources in the Bush administration to see the wider scenario at play?The latter...