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Holworthy resident Evan N. Rachlin ‘05 was just a normal first-year on Tuesday, Sept. 18. To be more specific, he was one in a rush to get to his 1 p. m. physics section. Wearing a pair of flip-flops, Evan grabbed his blue North Face backpack with his left hand as he was going out the door. One of the waist strap buckles got stuck on his left big toe, and when he swung the backpack up to his shoulder, it “completely ripped off the left side of my toenail and, like...
...gauze. For a while Evan had to wear handmade stylish footgear on his left foot—he attached a duct tape strap to his flip-flops because the layers of gauze made his foot too big to fit in anything else. Now he can wear normal shoes and play soccer using his left foot. The toenail is a little stub about a quarter of an inch wide, and “should be grown by January...
Mayor Anthony D. Galluccio said that Cambridge’s fiscal resources would allow it to hire more law enforcement or emergency officers if the need arose, although Healy said officials had been able to keep up with both normal crime calls and the additional calls that came after Sept...
...alert, but they have also told us to get out and see a movie, order a steak, maybe fly to see Aunt Lisa in Palm Springs. Behind the mixed message is a question: How can we strike a balance between watching for future attacks and getting on with normal life...
...real for Americans, it is no less so for Afghans, even though those who live in that Texas-size country have been fighting the Soviets or one another for more than 20 years. The bombing was "a normal thing for us," said Mohammed Hashim, 23, who was in the Interior Ministry in the wrecked capital of Kabul at the time of the first attacks. "The women and children went out into the street. In Kabul there's no safe place to hide from bombs anyway." That's why some got out of town; October is the time of the grape...