Word: sept
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Your article of Friday, Sept. 20, was accurate insofar as it called attention to some of the shortcomings of the lottery system. Accurate, but incomplete...
...thoughtful answers, Dole's aides with canned rhetoric. Then union officers asked for personal interviews. Dole's staff responded with a form letter saying the candidate was too busy, but "we will keep your invitation on file." Clinton and top aides chatted with F.O.P. leaders in the White House Sept. 9 for 45 minutes--taking 15 minutes away from the time allotted to the next visitor, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Big surprise! The F.O.P. gave Clinton its first-ever endorsement of a Democrat...
...future support. For the time being, the power struggle among the President's men is taking place in the shadows. Most of the would-be contenders deny indignantly any thought of succeeding Yeltsin. But the operation is looming--his doctors are expected to name a date on Sept. 25 and are warning that the President is facing a "big and serious" operation. Depending on the outcome, the struggle will either flare up into the open or abruptly subside, until the next crisis...
...talk, saying his family in the North would suffer for it. Then, after downing a few drinks of soju, the local gin, he became voluble but also contradictory. According to his latest account, Lee was a member of the crew of the sub, which left North Korean waters on Sept. 14 with seven infiltrators and 19 crew. Their mission, he says, was to spy on an airport, radar installations and civilian preparedness. On Sept. 15 they put three men ashore to observe the Kangnung airport while the sub cruised back and forth along the coastline. They picked up the three...
...anyone who has read The Crimson so far this year, one thing that was hard to miss was the full-page letter which ran every day from Sept. 17 through 20 titled, "Toward A More Diverse Newspaper." The letter, which admitted that The Crimson has a decidedly un-diverse staff, is part of an attempt by the paper to recruit and retain minority and female writers. The letter was co-signed by Todd F. Braunstein '97, The Crimson's president, and The Crimson's two diversity co-chairs, Victoria E.M. Cain '97 and Corinne E. Funk...