Rhetoric of fear
By Hamza Shaban | September 17, 2008IN THE years since the towers fell in New York City, a new villain has emerged in the story of America.
IN THE years since the towers fell in New York City, a new villain has emerged in the story of America.
WHEN THE moon is new and the sun has risen every Muslim on Earth will begin to starve. During the month of Ramadan, which began September 1st, Muslims who are physically able cease to eat or drink (even water) during the daylight.
WHILE Barack Obama has earned his party?s nomination, most Americans do not know Ralph Nader is running for president.
AT THE heart of our University lies the Lawn. It forms the symbolic and concrete core of our Academical Village.
THE DAY the towers fell was a day that tested our nation's character. When we remember Sept. 11, we remind ourselves why our country is a good one.
ASIDE from telling us that the Darden Dean makes more money than the entire media studies department combined, the published salaries of our faculty can tell us what trends we can expect in the future.
THROUGH satire, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert mock American political life. They expose the hypocrisy and ineptitude of our politics and critique our culture by revealing the ridiculous.
TIME IS against Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. With 10 months left in the Bush administration, the opportunity for a Palestinian and Israeli peace may soon pass her by.
SHORTSIGHTED Democrats see Ralph Nader as ancient Athenians saw Socrates: as a dissenting, unreasonable man.
FORTY years have passed since Martin Luther King Jr. was shotdead. But here, in his future, the legacy of civil rights has climbed heights where bullets cannot reach.