Word: raced
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...particular, the senior-level editors could participate in a race awareness workshop, not unlike those in which many large corporations engage. Hopefully, this would broaden the editors' perception and interpretation of issues relating to minorities while helping them to distinguish between fact and racist, or "racially insensitive" fiction. To secure facts more adequately, an editorial liason position could be established to maintain communication with minority student groups, so that if an article such as Hsia's should come before the liason he would be able to edit it accordingly...
...course, these are merely a few suggestions, but they demonstrate the minority community's sincere interest in working with The Crimson and any other group to eradicate misperceptions and inaccurate stereotypes. Although The Crimson does not necessarily have to be a force to increase intercultural understanding and improve race relations, at the very least it must live up to its responsibility to present professional journalism, free of misperceptions and inaccuracies...
Dean of Student Archie C. Epps III and Assistant Dean for Race Relations and Minority Affairs Hilda Hernandez-Gravelle have helped the students draft their complaints, the students said...
...them. He allowed campaign manager James Baker to play that role last fall, but in the White House he has so far denied such authority to Sununu. Bush entered the Oval Office determined to shed his image as an accident-prone candidate who needed extensive handling during the presidential race. He is equally determined not to look as sleepy or staff- managed as Ronald Reagan. As a result, Bush brought along no members of his superb campaign staff to the White House, "and that was very conscious on his part," says a former campaign official...
...geneticist today would even talk about creating a master race. Scientists are careful to point out that experiments in gene therapy will be aimed at curing hereditary disease and relieving human suffering, not at producing some sort of superman. But what if people want to use the technology to improve genes that are not defective but merely mediocre? Could genetic engineering become the cosmetic surgery of the next century? Will children who have not had their genes altered be discriminated against...