Word: sadnesses
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...detected, but the pursuit of the perpetrators and their motives would certainly continue. The financial profits clearly had to be a powerful incentive for such a reckless project. A desire to create some sympathy for the entire Nazi movement and to humanize Hitler seemed likely aims too. But the sad saga of the truly incredible diaries raised troubling questions about how such an implausible scheme had been taken so seriously, however briefly. The mere appearance of the volumes should have warned even the most gullible observer: all 62 books precisely alike, despite their span of 13 years; all their pages...
Even if the coach was the one rejected, the city of Baltimore could not help feeling slurred. That Baltimore now constitutes the N.F.L.'s Black Hole of Calcutta seems rather sad if you know the charms of gritty cities and remember Lenny Moore, Raymond Berry, Jim Parker, Gino Marchetti, Alan Ameche, L.G. ("Long Gone") Dupre, "Big Daddy" Lipscomb and other remarkable players on exceptional Colts teams. "It is nothing but money, greed and selfishness any more," laments former Baltimore Quarterback Johnny Unitas, who never turned down any money but whose first salary in the N.F.L...
Cindy Bailen, WCOZ D. J. and local artist coordinator, concurred "I'm sad when I hear of Boston bands going to New York to make their fortune." She stressed that while the industry is undeniably bigger in New York, music is a big enough industry here to support many musicians. "With about 1,600 working bands it's hard enough to get heard here. And Boston has a tradition of being a more progressive, open minded town" All cited the thousands of students, a ready made rock audience, as another advantage available for Boston bands...
Klein's non-renewal, moreover, has occurred within a department whose chairman claims it has one of the best records of affirmative action for women; if this is true, then it is a sad statement about the rest of the College, for the Government Department currently has one tenured woman professor...
COMPOSED AS IT IS of students, faculty, and alumni, the ACSR has traditionally lagged politically behind the rest of the campus on the South Africa issue. That it has moved as sharply as it has would seem to suggest a growing polarization on the subject on campus. The sad thing is that such a polarization does not bother the men of Massachusetts Hall, who sit pretty as waves of students and ACSR members shuffle through Harvard's revolving door. Next fall, the excitement of this spring's divestiture drive will have died down, a whole new batch of ACSR members...