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Hillary Rodham while at Wellesley College, 1969.Lee Balterman鈥擳he LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesBy Lily Rothman and Liz RonkJuly 25, 2016 8:00 AM EDTThis week   Democratic National Convention will be far from the first time that Hillary Clinton will <a href=https://www.adidas-samba-adidas.es>adidas samba adidas</a>  find herself the center of attention. As the crowning momentmdash o farmdash;of a life in politics, her presumed nomination as the party   nominee for president will put her in a familiar spot beneath the nation   spotlight.In 1969, however, things were different. Hillary Rodham received early national attention as a student speaker at Wellesley College   graduation that yearmdash;a role that earned her a spot in a LIF <a href=https://www.adidas-yeezys.es>adidas yeezy</a> E Magazine round-up of the words presented by the nation   student leaders at their graduations. Through their scathing words and clenched fists, the magazine assessed, the Class of  ;69 made clear that the protest will go on.We are, all of us, exploring a world that none of us understands and attempting to create within that uncertainty, she told her classmates, in a speech that LIFE excerpted. But  <a href=https://www.inkwiz.se>ugg</a> there are some things we feelm Cxwb The Senate Gets Ready to Spend A Sum of Money Unseen Since World War II
By Victor LuckersonApril 13, 2016 10:34 AM EDTA train dispatcher who was playing a cell phone game just before two trains collided in Germany in Februar <a href=https://www.adidas-yeezys.fr>yeezy</a> y is expected to be charged with involuntary manslaughter.State pr <a href=https://www.nike-dunks.de>nike dunk high</a> osecutors have found the man at fault for the collision in Bavaria, the New York Times reports. Eleven people died and 80 were injured. The trains collided as they traveled  <a href=https://www.adidas-yeezys.fr>yeezy slide</a> around a bend where the drivers could not see each other.The dispatcher turned his phone on during his morning shift and played a mobile game until just before the collision, the state prosecutor said. Because of this distraction, the accused made some false assumptions about where the trains might cross, gave the wrong signals to the trains and entered a false combination for an emergency call to the trains, so that the drivers never heard those signals, the prosecutor said in a statement. The 39-year-old dispatcher has admitted to playing the game but said that his attention had not been diverted.<NYT>More Must-Reads from TIMEThe Reinvention of J.D. VanceIran, Trump, and the Third Assassination PlotWelcome to the Golden Age of ScamsDid the Pandemic Break Our Brains 33 True Crime Doc
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