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Despite these outward signs of festivity, the “Olympic” food bore a suspicious resemblance to regularly served fare. In fact, with the exception of white and dark chocolate fondue and bread bowls for the stew that was served, Olympic dishes were indistinguishable from their less-festive counterparts...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Just Short of a Medal | 1/14/2002 | See Source »

...hands round the bitch's neck then dangles it over the side. It's Man and Beast pushed to the edge. Lee relents and locks it in a closet. The building's janitor, however, has a predilection for poodle and returns it to the action?in a pot of stew. This dog is the first of many to perish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Endangered Species | 12/19/2001 | See Source »

...York state of Mind." Not exactly a tourist slogan. The tradition of documenting New York in song continues in the 21st century. The Irish rock band U2 have a song on their newest album entitled "New York": "Irish, Italians, Jews and Hispanics/ Religious nuts, political fanatics in the stew," Bono sings on the song, which was written long before September 11th...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Sounds of New York | 10/20/2001 | See Source »

...been solved at the expense of the Palestinian population. The total number of refugees is in the many millions. The refugee camps are places of hopeless squalor where deep resentments fester among a doomed people with no future. They have been left there for the last 50 years to stew in their fury by governments local and far away, large and small, with little cynical regard for their lot. The massacres in the regfugee camps in 1982 are still a vivid memory. Recent actions by the Sharon government in Israel have made Palestinians on the West Bank virtually prisoners...

Author: By Nur O. Yalman, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Terrorist Mayhem in America | 9/21/2001 | See Source »

...years later. Secretly she hoped for a girl. The bellyache came and passed--the labor lasted not even an hour--and she called the baby Aisha. Aisha was a lively child with huge brown eyes and a flashing smile. She ate whatever Marie prepared, whether it was a stew of pounded cassava leaves or a soup of ground peanuts; but like all children, she loved sweets, and would charm her mother into buying her cakes at the market. She slept in the same bed with her mother, always staying close. And when her little sister came along, she nicknamed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Mother-And-Child Reunion | 5/14/2001 | See Source »

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