Conformity Explained
By Tim Young | May 22, 1996For some reason, I've come across a couple of college guides recently during trips to bookstores.
For some reason, I've come across a couple of college guides recently during trips to bookstores.
We're seeing a longer, more drawn out Student Assembly campaign this year. This is due to new rule changes that have largely scrapped the designated campaign period those of us who have watched these elections before are used to.
In North Korea, history textbooks used in schools teach that Kim Il-Sung, longtime Communist dictator of North Korea, single-handedly wiped out an entire battalion of Japanese soldiers during World War II.
Well, the numbers are in from the New Hampshire Primary, and the race continues to get more and more intriguing.
The weather this time of year is annoying: subzero temperatures and blizzards are ubiquitous, and neither my comatose car nor I are feeling particularly well.
I must admit that I hadn't been thinking much about foreign policy lately. But something I saw in the news last week made me stop and think.
Like most of you, thanks to the football game with Harvard this weekend, I have most of today off.
When coming up with an idea for a column, I was mulling over the issues of the day -- O.J., Bosnia, Medicare, and the like.
This summer, a large majority of the U.S. House of Representatives (including my own Representative) voted to approve an amendment to the Constitution prohibiting "flag desecration," whatever that means.
To the Editor: In his April 3, 1995, column, Kevin Walsh proclaimed that "The fight against abortion is not just righteous.