Word: rage
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...debate about controversial issues on campus. Unfortunately, the way in which it presents these issues damages any hope of rational debate. With more reasonable language and less distortion of reality, the Guide might have made a valuable contribution to discussion on campus. Instead, it opted for the easy option: rage senselessly against the world and hope you get your...
...becoming the moral underclass of the moral underclass - the untouchables' untouchables - chased into the rabbit hole of protective isolation and mauled to death if they emerge. And be honest: Do they deserve any better? Maybe not. But maybe society as a whole does. The nation teetered between sorrow and rage last week after Charles Roberts, a 32-year-old milkman in Pennsylvania's Amish country, committed his incomprehensible murders of five girls in a one-room schoolhouse, before turning his gun on himself. The fury over Roberts' savagery was made worse when he told his wife by cell phone shortly...
...editors of the guide. “Harvard is still not an ideal place, you know, equality still does not exist here.” The guide, which contains articles entitled “Economics Exposed: A Critique of the Harvard Economics Department” and “Rage: I’m a Working-Class Queer Black Woman,” also lists resources on feminism, activism, and the local arts scene. The guide does not pull any punches in its criticism of campus institutions it considers elitist. Regarding final clubs, Drummey writes: “Going...
...attacks, a year later.The filmmakers examine myriad emotional states—fertile ground for the talented ensemble company. The stories can require psychological excavation, an undertaking performed literally by Dr. Trabulous (Tony Shalhoub), a cantankerous psychologist who analyzes Sandie (Jim Gaffigan). As Dr. Trabulous discovers, Sandie has buried his rage inside himself, a stark contrast to the brooding Satish (Sharat Saxena), a hired security goon who externalizes his anger.Bearing one’s own grief, the filmmakers suggest, is a recipe for violence: a personal distillation of the terrorist rage deftly portrayed in “United...
BLOGGING ABOUT HIGHER education is all the rage these days, with US News' Paper Trail, Richard Bradley's Shots in the Dark and the Chronicle of Higher Education's News Blog, to name just a few. This summer saw the addition of two Ivy-focused blogs: IvyGate and IvyLeak. Today they get profiled in the Brown Daily Herald and the New York Sun (question for the latter: why?), and the mud flies. Here's a quick summary of both pieces...