Word: todayã
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...seediness and its character and its suggestion of colliding worlds and species. The bicycles-across-the-moon scene in E.T. has a magical simplicity. Now filmmakers have the power to cram anything they want into the frame. Imagine how Spielberg could have ruined that scene with today??€™s special effects (basketcam could have given you E.T.’s perspective, midflight...
...University holiday, it’s inevitable that some TFs will still hold section. Even those who would have canceled their sections on their own can still be overruled by professors, who can argue that because other sections this week were required to meet, equity demands the same of today??€™s sections. And in seminars and tutorials, where attendance is often enforced by Draconian penalties for absence—sometimes two or three lead to automatic failure—the problem is still more acute. Unless the physics department unlocks the secret to instantaneous travel, such obligations will...
Unlike before the recent speech by former Vice President Al Gore ’69—when undergraduate tickets were snapped up for the event in the ARCO Forum at the Kennedy School of Government in a matter of hours—ticket distribution for today??€™s event lasted for more than two days...
...Arab Americans and Middle Eastern nationals who are living in the U.S. is eerily similar to the Japanese American internment during World War II. Many argue that the singling out of Japanese Americans was, to a large extent, racially motivated (German Americans were not sent to detention camps). Today??€™s singling out of Arab Americans is, to some degree, a result of an already present racial bias. As we travel down this slippery slope, we may once again find ourselves sacrificing the rights of a racial minority for the supposed protection of the general public...
...American public has wondered since Sept. 11 what it can do to assist in the war effort and to help strengthen the nation. Although Bush has urged Americans back to work, it has become clear that Americans will do much more than merely donate blood and money. Today??€™s Americans are happy to serve their country in numerous ways all around the world. In the honored tradition of the Peace Corps, begun under President John F. Kennedy ‘40, a former Crimson editor, Americans are called today to better serve their country and their kind...