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...this son of German-Americans wrote a training film called "Your Job in Germany," which said that the German people would have to prove they were no longer Hitler's willing patsies. But most of his wartime Geisel spent on a cartoon series called Private SNAFU (from the military acronym Situation Normal All Fouled Up, or word to that effect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: That Old Feeling: Seuss on First | 3/2/2004 | See Source »

...UCLA—unhappy Caucasians, lost among the Asians,” Thernstrom said, garnering giggles in the audience by facetiously redefining the acronym for the Los Angeles school...

Author: By Faryl Ury, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Thernstrom Discusses Race, Politics | 2/19/2004 | See Source »

...though the Historically Unprecedented Hijacking of the Constitution to Single Out a Group of American Citizens and Explicitly Deny Them Certain Rights Amendment might be more apt. (Perhaps the perennially forthright Attorney General John Ashcroft initially favored the latter title, but was told by the Justice Department that the acronym would be too unwieldy...

Author: By Marcel A.Q. Laflamme and Adam P. Schneider, MARCEL A.Q. LAFLAMME AND ADAM P. SCHNEIDERS | Title: Bush Talks Around Same-Sex Marriage | 1/26/2004 | See Source »

...presidential candidates and politics on the national stage. So I dutifully wrote to Harvard Students for Dean to test the waters. As luck would have it, this columnist got Dean’s first name wrong in her email, and subsequently got no responses from HSD, (or whatever their acronym is). But then I realized: I’m not interested in writing about Dean. How he really likes to talk tough about Bush. How he’s running a more grassroots campaign. How he ran a tight ship in Vermont. It’s all great. It?...

Author: By Beccah G. Watson, | Title: What Would Radcliffe Rugby Do | 1/9/2004 | See Source »

...brightest students who did not necessarily have the benefit of being a legacy or attending a prep school. It was developed by Princeton psychologist Carl Brigham, who based many of the questions on an intelligence test had developed for the U.S. army. The test’s now infamous acronym stood for Student Aptitude Test, and was intended to measure exactly that. Since the SAT’s inception, however, the College Board has “tried to move away from the word aptitude,” according to Kristin Carnaham, associate director of Public Affairs for the College...

Author: By Harry Ritter, | Title: The Failure of the SATs | 11/18/2003 | See Source »

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