Word: sentimentalized
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...wonder if we attend the same school as Reid does. The white, non-Jewish students who hung Confederate flags last year weren't getting along "admirably" with Blacks, or for that matter with Hillel, which joined BSA in condemning the flag hangers. The anti-Arab sentiment expressed during the Gulf War is not "admirable." The Asian-American Association and Raza's condemnation of Jeffries were not an example of "admirable" relations between Blacks and Asians or between Blacks and Hispanics. And the recent anti-Asian slurs in Lamont and the bigoted phone calls to Asian-American students show that much...
...ward off any direct assaults to his credibility one exit poll showed that 66 percent of New York Democratic voters were dissatisfied with the current choices. To interpret that as a mandate for anachronistic power brokers to produce the Teflon candidate, however, is a serious misreading of voter sentiment...
...sense, a charity like United Way has thrived by reinventing the wheel. Most of its money comes from payroll deductions, just as taxes do. It does not have the compulsion of the law behind it, but it does have heavy pressure from employers. And it appeals to the sentiment that together we can do what we cannot do separately...
...many 30-second attack ads, too many sound bites, too many backroom handlers, too much voter apathy and too many dispiriting November choices between candidates who inspire more cynicism than commitment. These interludes pass, which is why it is tempting to dismiss the latest manifestations of anti-Establishment sentiment as a short-term aberration. The Connecticut Democratic primary, after all, was highly unrepresentative: the turnout was low, the voters were angry, and local favorite Paul Tsongas had just withdrawn from the race. (In a clear rebuff to Clinton, the former Massachusetts Senator received 20% of the vote.) Still, there...
...believe that the campus news periodicals must firmly acknowledge that anti-Asian sentiment is a growing problem in America and devote more time and energy in addressing these issues. Only then can the Harvard community as a whole work together in easing racial tension and help prevent ethnic conflict in the future. Connie Chang Mark Kim Co-presidents Harvard-Radcliffe Asian American Association