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...waiting for Darfur to degenerate into another Bosnia or Rwanda? I am surprised by the evasive tactics of the Bush Administration and its European counterparts. After its blunders in Afghanistan and Iraq, the U.S. does not want to be seen as antagonizing another Muslim state, and the E.U. is foot dragging, probably out of fear of reprisal attacks by Islamist militants. The defenseless people of Darfur need the intervention of the free world before they are completely exterminated. We must collectively rise up and protect those people, whose only "sin" is that they are black. Paul Onoriode Oteri Sapele, Nigeria...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 10/28/2004 | See Source »

Completed before the start of the 1998 season and conveniently located 30 seconds by foot from the street most of the school’s eating clubs call home, the building is one many Division-I football programs would be proud to call home. The glaring eyesores are relatively few and far between—though the skeletal statues of two Tigers mid-pounce guarding a main stairway come immediately to mind. Modern amenities are built directly into the main thoroughfares, fans are seated close to the action and seated comfortably, and a this-century-model scoreboard rises from...

Author: By Timothy J. Mcginn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: MCGINN AND TONIC: Facilities too Good To House Princeton | 10/28/2004 | See Source »

...adage “You are what you eat” applied to presidential candidates, Americans would find themselves on Nov. 2 deliberating between a six-foot tall tamale and a French-speaking chocolate chip cookie. Each candidate has his own particular food soft spot. John F. Kerry has never flip-flopped on his love for chocolate, and in the 1970s co-founded a bakery in downtown Boston. George W. Bush found within himself weapons of mass consumption when he frequented Mexican restaurants. For any undecided voters, a trip to Boston’s Quincy Market and the local taqueria...

Author: By Carol P. Choy, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Presidential Tastes | 10/28/2004 | See Source »

Freshman year, before he perfected the art of bondage, Mark was just beginning to build up his arsenal of SM paraphernalia. He bought leather shirts, floggers—shorter, thicker versions of whips—and 25-foot strings of rope. He even strung his own cat-o-nine-tails out of parachute rope. All of these items he hid away in the closet of his room. The closest SM/Leather retailer to Harvard is Hubba Hubba on Massachusetts Avenue, but Mark puts his money elsewhere, calling Hubba Hubba “ridiculously overpriced...

Author: By Kevin J. Feeney, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Sadomasochism Comes Out of the Closet | 10/28/2004 | See Source »

Along with Dawson, these players round out my Payton Award top five at this point. So, it seems the Crimson running back finds himself where he’s always found himself since setting foot on the well-groomed grass of Harvard Stadium...

Author: By Michael R. James, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Dawson's Push For the Payton | 10/26/2004 | See Source »

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