Word: sexistence
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...Iraq and the recruiting of young people to be sent there to kill and die,” said Matt Osborn, who is affiliated with the Boston Direct Action Project. The protesters’ slogans reflected this wider focus. Along with “Racist, sexist, anti-gay, U.S. military go away!” they chanted “No blood for oil! Troops out now!” and demanded “Money for jobs and education, not for war and occupation.” Several of the protesters criticized what Cambridge resident Eli Beckerman called...
...Chi’s move to 1124 Mass. Ave. Afterward, Pi Eta sold the property to the Foundation for Civic Leadership for $2.75 million, according to Crimson archives. All Is Fair now shares the building with progressive student groups such as the Harvard Social Forum and Students Against Super Sexist Institutions-We Oppose Oppressive Final Clubs...
...Last year, I came back to school ready to take action. During a drunken discussion of the lamer points of final clubs, a group of friends and I decided to start SASSI-WOOF Clubs (Students Against Super Sexist Institutions-We Oppose Oppressive Final Clubs). Our basic mission was to create a campus free of final clubs...
...there will be trouble.” After the Science Center rally, nearly 100 students and workers marched across the Yard in single file and complete silence, waving an American flag and holding signs. Reorganizing outside Cafe Gato Rojo, protestors said the war in Iraq is “sexist, racist, and classless.” The group then hopped on the Red Line to Park Street, where they had planned to meet with other demonstrators for a rally in Boston Common. But the Harvard group arrived in the Common about a half-hour early, so the protesters marched...
...plain, plump, unfairly named Lolita in Look At Me, who tries desperately to win affection in a world dominated by a famous, self-obsessed father. She followed up with another impressive portrayal as the teenage double-bass virtuoso and aspiring jazz musician Hannah, whose sweet struggles with sexist bandmates, a stiflingly affectionate Jewish family and her own ample waistline in 1960s Paris provided the heart and laughter of the comedy The First Time I Turned 20. In her new release, a Franco-Algerian tale of confused identity, she plays the supporting role of Nadège, who becomes ensnared...