Word: peninsulas
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...lies the issue of discourse. It seems that Ho and Perspective cannot bring themselves to argue with Lat on substantive points, rather, they must insult him on the basis of his ethnicity. This is a cheep shot, even from an editor of Perspective. G. Brent McGuire '95 for the Peninsula Council...
...Brent McGuire '95, president of the conservative publication Peninsula, says having a political agenda would detract from a minority group's primary role as a support locus for students...
Feltman might be referring to the views of people like G. Brent McGuire '95, a senior council member of the conservative magazine Peninsula. "Socialist ideas are very pervasive at Harvard, but they're not called that by the socialist," he says. "It's a play on words, but the ideas are as socialist as ever. [These ideas] are very dangerous because Harvard is so respected...
Above all, Clinton's deal is shrewd because it is more about economics than nukes. By envisioning new financial and diplomatic exchanges, the agreement aims to moderate the North's behavior. The regime may still fall, but if it does, it may now do so without embroiling the entire peninsula in a devastating...
...large part of The Crimson staff at the time was Jewish, he was accused of anti-Semitism. Have we seen this pattern before? If you are wondering if this is my only take on the issue, it is not. An editorial published in the 1992 February supplement of the Peninsula, not a magazine I cite often, by a self-identified white Roman Catholic who was on The Crimson board, agrees with me. He plainly states that "...because the Harvard Crimson doesn't like Dr. Counter, the Crimson interpreted the remarks in his letter as something sinister and evil, when...