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Word: opinionizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...rebuild the city is being questioned. How can the wealthiest country in the world turn its back on its own people? America may spend $30 billion reconstructing Iraq but quibbles about spending money on New Orleans. Let's hope that the recent Mardi Gras celebration will rally public opinion in favor of rebuilding the once proud city. Tony Keast Halifax, England On a Different Wavelength Joe Klein's column "Bush's broken political antenna" [March 6] remarked that in response to recent controversies, ranging from the debate over foreign control of U.S. ports to the awful news coming from Iraq...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: On the Way to Civil War? | 3/21/2006 | See Source »

...Society of Arab Students mark just two in a series of campus ethnic groups attempting to escape their homogenous image by opening their doors—and sometimes their officer boards—to members from other ethnicities.‘COLOR BLIND STUDENTS ASSOCIATION’In an opinion piece in The Crimson last spring that raised an uproar on campus, Jason L. Lurie ’05 charged that ethnic groups and the Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations “exacerbate the already intractable problem of self-segregation.”Lurie criticized ethnic organizations...

Author: By Laura A. Moore, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Ethnic Groups Reach Beyond Blood Ties | 3/21/2006 | See Source »

...Three years ago I had no doubt that removal of Saddam Hussein, one of the world's most blood-thirsty despots, is the just and well-founded venture. I haven't changed this opinion. I have also believed then that if the USA was saying that Iraq had the mass destruction weapons and the world security was threatened because of that, it was true. It appeared that it was not true. I thought that when the world's superpower undertakes a war, it has not only a plan how to win a military operation, but also a plan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Web Forum: Was It Worth It? | 3/21/2006 | See Source »

...invoking the infamous defense the United States had rejected for Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg. Harold H. Koh ’75, a dean and professor of international law at Yale, described the Bybee memo to the Senate Judiciary Committee as “the most clearly erroneous legal opinion I have ever read,” noting that it so “grossly overreads the President’s constitutional power” that it could even be used to justify genocide. “Experts in the law of war say his memo is evidence suggesting...

Author: By Curtis M. Brown, | Title: Whitewashing Torture | 3/20/2006 | See Source »

...have to ensure that you the reader understand and trust the tough journalistic decisions that the editors make on a daily basis. A lot of thought goes into our decision to print the name of a student charged with a crime or to run a poll gauging student opinion. But we often do not explain those decisions to you, leaving the impression that we may be deaf to criticism...

Author: By William C. Marra, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Beginning of a Bi-Weekly Dialogue | 3/20/2006 | See Source »

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