Word: warã
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...noon approached, buses of “ordinar y Americans” continued to arrive. The crowd swelled to 100,000, filling the grounds. Its demographics had changed. A group of pink-cheeked New Englanders bore a “Vermonters against the war?? banner; church associations filed in with their own signs. A Dart mouth College contingent of about fifteen students landed, looking fresh off a ski trip. By early afternoon, the masses seemed to now be mostly young white professionals, retired couples, conservatively-dressed Muslim families pushing babystrollers, middle-aged people in anti-war T-shirts...
...GOSSIP OF THE WEEK: Stacy P. Somers ’06 was up all night studying for her “Cold War?? midterm. “If I had just kept up with the reading, I wouldn’t have been awake all last night,” she reflected...Tim E. Grayson ’04 thinks the dining hall hot dogs are the worst he’s ever had. “I don’t really understand why it’s true,” he said...
...BGLTSA and BOND have come to see our roles on campus as complementary, rather than competitive. Our evolution from “turf war?? to a relationship of mutual support allows us to work together in affording GLBTQ students a panoply of opportunities for both social and political engagement. In the future, we would ask The Crimson to give credit where credit is due—discuss past schisms in light of the bridges that have been built across them. We encourage The Crimson to explore the challenges and possibilities facing GLBTQ campus organizations today, rather than exorcising...
...don’t, however, live our lives in a vacuum. In truth, the story of my life begins on Ông Ngoai’s farm and in those alleys where my mother learned about survival. Poverty, toil and war??these are the things that shaped her survivalist mentality. This mentality remains a constant point of contention between us. When I took a late leave of absence last semester, she ridiculed the notion of “taking time...
...question of invading Iraq deserves to be debated with vigor and candor on all sides. Afterwards, if we are convinced that a new Iraqi war??s results would not end up in the plus column for life and liberty—or, more chillingly, if we believe that Bush’s unspoken motives for invasion would distort his perceptions to the point that any positive results would be undone—then we should oppose war in Iraq wholeheartedly. But the time has come to leave behind this inordinate attention to the president’s motive...