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...Ruth says. “Ronald Reagan didn’t have that great of credibility, so when the U.S. government says someone isn’t a spy, people tend to think he was a spy,” she says. “That was the most painful thing.”Perhaps some of the pain was eased when Daniloff was received as a celebrity at home. “I had speaking invitations all over the country all the time,” Daniloff remembers. And he says he was paid anywhere from...

Author: By Sarah E.F. Milov, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Journalist Was Captured by KGB | 6/3/2006 | See Source »

...restrictive as students may have found the rules, they were often too busy to complain, according to graduates of the College. Students simply accepted parietals as rules that permeated all college campuses, David Royce ’56 says.“They were a huge pain in the butt, but I can’t say there was a controversy because we lived in those near-dead days when we didn’t think [parietals] would ever end,” adds Royce, who is a former Crimson editor.PURITANS IN THE DORMSThroughout the mid-1950s, petitions requesting...

Author: By Madeline W. Lissner, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Meet Me in My Room...but not past 7 p.m. | 6/3/2006 | See Source »

...Some are already paying a heavy price. In a statement issued from jail and posted in numerous blogs, blogger activist Mohammad Al Sharqawi said police brutally beat and sexually assaulted him when he was arrested leaving a protest last week. "The pain was terrible," Al Sharqawi wrote in the statement. "I was screaming asking him to stop so that I can catch my breath. He took down my underwear, and tore it to pieces, and kept on hitting me on different parts of my body asking me to bend down. I refused, but they forced me." Gamal Eid, Al Sharqawi...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Egypt Is Cracking Down on Bloggers | 6/1/2006 | See Source »

...stophumanizing our horses. This one's got the heart of a champion; that one has the guts of a mudder. We don't really know if there's anything behind all that anthropomorphizing. But we do know that a horse can suffer as we do--feeling pain, fear, confusion and shock. All of that was on display at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md., when Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro shattered his right rear leg at the Preakness Stakes just moments out of the gate. It was the most stunning racehorse disaster since the death of the famous filly Ruffian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bred for Speed ... Built for Trouble | 5/28/2006 | See Source »

...family members and friends. Now Ulumba is struggling to save another life: that of her 6-month-old son Amoni Mutombo. The baby lies whimpering in a clinic run by the aid organization Doctors Without Borders. His belly is distended by malnutrition, and although he appears to be in pain, he has no energy to cry. A nurse tries for half an hour to inject antibiotics into Amoni's twiglike arm, its wrinkled skin wrapped loosely around the bones. Without the drugs, he will die, wasting away from starvation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Deadliest War In The World | 5/28/2006 | See Source »

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