Word: visitations
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...than merely corporeal gratification. Culture vultures will enjoy the GALERIE BOB VAN ORSOUW, tel: (41-44) 273 1100, as well as ART ONE, tel: (41-44) 273 1737, which specializes in the work of young up-and-comers. And no trip to Zurich-West would be complete without a visit to KUNSTHALLE, tel: (41-44) 272 1515, and the MIGROS MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, tel: (41-44) 277 2050, both located in the 19th century former L?wenbr?u brewery. The beer may be gone, but these galleries, like the rest of the area, are offering diversions that are no less intoxicating...
Harvard will return to action in the final full weekend of league play as Princeton comes to Soldiers Field for a doubleheader tomorrow, followed by a visit by Penn on Sunday. Both twinbills are slated to begin at noon, and the Crimson is hopeful for a strong set of games...
...moderate its views. Two-and-a-half months have passed, and Hamas has chosen terror and violence rather than peace and reconciliation. In addition to supporting terrorism, Hamas has attempted to smuggle missiles and assault rifles through Jordan, a move which was duly rejected when Jordan canceled a diplomatic visit by a Hamas emissary. These troubling developments do not bode well for the Middle East peace process, and it seems that the only way for Palestinians and Israelis to attain peace is under a different Palestinian regime. In that vein, we hope that the U.S. and Europe pressure other nations...
...leader met days after the Six-Day War and the defection of Joseph Stalin's daughter to the U.S caused outrage in Moscow. In Iceland in 1986, Gorbachev and Reagan met and almost banned nuclear weapons. When Chinese President Hu Jintao came to the White House on Thursday, the visit lasted five hours including lunch...
...without any real progress on these issues, Hu's first visit to the White House was marked more by visuals than anything else. There was the well-choreographed arrival on the South Lawn, which was upset by a "journalist" for a newspaper run by the Falun Gong, who protested China's crackdown on the religious sect. "Of course we knew she was with a Falun Gong paper," said a senior Administration official trying to explain the snafu. "But if we'd kept her out, the world would have screamed that we were guilty of censorship." So her cries came...