Word: affectively
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...electoral College when the popular vote should count, now more than ever? There should be just one vote, allowing our citizens to speak once and for all. Maybe then the money spent and the promises made by the candidates would be directed more at the real issues that affect voters. Jerry Keeler Bath...
...callboxes on the aesthetic quality of the Common. As the UC’s meeting minutes from February 26 derisively note, the commission wanted the callboxes to “look like trees.”) An elected undergraduate could still expect tough debates over issues that will affect students now and in the future, from a push for more late-night eateries to the questions of rent control and affordable housing. However, this undergraduate councillor, unlike the UC, would have the vote and inside debating power to expedite matters...
...Russia just as President Vladimir Putin consolidates his power and reasserts control over the energy business (among other things). In recent months, Putin has muzzled the independent press and abolished popular elections of regional governors. Western companies may rationalize that increased government control over the press won't affect their deals, but interference in the economy--increased restrictions on foreign ownership, the assault on Yukos and big shifts in taxation--has raised concerns about Putin's commitment to the rule of law. Many Russians are voting with their wallets. This year capital flight will easily exceed $10 billion, up from...
...Electoral College when the popular vote should count now more than ever? There should be just one vote, allowing our citizens to speak once and for all. Maybe then the money spent and the promises made by the candidates would be directed more at the real issues that affect voters. JERRY KEELER Bath...
...narration directly to the audience; in his self-absorption, Alfie considers his life to be the constant focus of a camera. But his ostentatious posing for the camera also reveals Alfie as childish and even innocent—he doesn’t think his actions affect anyone. Jude Law’s acting, on the other hand, has just the right touch of joviality and supreme confidence with which Alfie begins the movie. The film is utterly realistic in demonstrating that understanding mistakes is not always enough to rectify them...