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...major issue of our time, the Iraq War, she voted for the resolution authorizing war, arguing that Saddam Hussein must “disarm or be disarmed”. Subsequently, when public support of the war started diminishing, Clinton’s perspective changed accordingly??a change politicized further by her refusal to honestly accept her vote as a mistake. In its place, she shirked blame, arguing that President Bush implemented Operation Iraqi Freedom poorly. She has also criticized the May 2007 troop surge, offensively proclaiming that if Iraqis are “not going to stand...

Author: By Sahand Moarefy | Title: A Liberal’s Case Against Clinton | 2/8/2008 | See Source »

...café is open until 2), but it needs time to work the kinks out: the waitstaff is eager, but inexperienced, and mistakes made during the preparation of the dishes are common. The café tries to epitomize urban chic in the Square, and it’s priced accordingly??most dishes will run you five to 10 dollars. But until Z Square improves, stick with that grease-sweating, tongue-burning slice from ’Noch’s—it’s still the best bang for your buck...

Author: By Francesca T. Gilberti, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Open Late, Cheap, and a Little Bit Chic | 10/18/2006 | See Source »

...common sense that with classes resuming the next morning, most students are back on campus (and hungry) by Sunday night. After all, if the College librarians figured that students would need space to study on Sunday night—and fully reopened the libraries at noon on Sunday accordingly??we can reasonably expect HUDS to show similar foresight and fire up a few more ovens. In the future, we hope that, after a vacation, HUDS errs on the side of reopening too many dining halls early instead of not enough...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: Feeding Time | 4/5/2006 | See Source »

...indigenous to the New World, he said.) Diamond also said that Eurasia’s horizontal orientation was conducive to trade and the exchange of knowledge because agricultural innovations at one location could be transmitted to another point on the continent that had the same latitude and—accordingly??a similar climate. However, in vertically-oriented continents such as Africa and the Americas, where longitude remains relatively constant but latitude varies dramatically, Diamond said, these sorts of exchanges are more difficult. For instance, ancient people in Mexico invented the wheel, and their contemporaries in the Andes...

Author: By Tom C. Denison, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Diamond Talks History | 3/9/2006 | See Source »

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