Word: upã
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Dates: during 2001-2001
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...crumbling walls and not much else.” Cars were burnt out and destroyed and Edgar discovered that his favorite hang-out spot was riddled with bullet holes. Edgar’ original hunch that the nation’s political leaders had “given up?? on the country was proved correct—almost all the senior government ministers had escaped, leaving the nation with “an overwhelming feeling of defenseless?...
...shortest presidential tenures in Harvard’s history, accomplished some of the most significant changes in the University’s history. In addition to purchasing the land in Allston—where one or another of Harvard’s faculties will eventually end up??there was the long-awaited merger with sister school Radcliffe College, vocal support of affirmative action policies, the bolstering of the Afro-American Studies Department to national prominence and the growth of financial...
Cambridge school committee member C. Denise Simmons—who recently announced that she is running in the fall’s city council election—said that lowering the voting age would have a “trickle-up?? effect, as more activity by students would encourage parents to become more involved in voting...
...here we are in 2001 with a dream match-up??New Jersey versus Colorado...
...Dusting off the “grown-up?? heroes of my childhood, it was a shock to learn that I had lapped them all. Nancy Drew (don’t laugh) is as perpetually 18 as her strawberry blond hair and two-dimensional storylines; Jane Eyre is 19 when she reunites for good with a late-thirty-something Mr. Rochester (why did that always seem romantic before?); and the life crises of Holden Caulfield and Esther Greenwood have come and gone by 20. Worse yet, Romeo and Juliet (at approximately 16 and 14, respectively) are practically prepubescent...