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...Method Man is also flat. Parts of ODB’s verse here have already appeared on Ghostface’s “9 Milli Bros,” suggesting that all the original Dirty material in existence has already been stretched thin. This may be to blame for the abundance and low quality of the filler on this album. But just when it seems that it’s all going downhill, hope surfaces again with “ODB, Don’t Go Breaking My Heart,” one of the most whacked-out love...

Author: By Tom C. Denison, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: NEW MUSIC: ODB | 11/8/2006 | See Source »

...party's brighter 2008 presidential prospects. As chairman of the Republican Governors Association, Romney raised a record $20 million in the first three quarters of the year (the previous high mark was $18 million in 2004). But with the Republicans' poor showing in the governors' races, some of the blame will fall on Romney...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Big Gains in the Statehouses | 11/7/2006 | See Source »

...you’ve been reading boredatlamont.com, Horny, and I can hardly say I blame you. After a somewhat lackluster debut, the confessional blog is proving quite entertaining, if rather harsh toward a certain advice columnist...

Author: By Sara J. Culver, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: DEAR SARA | 11/6/2006 | See Source »

...them would probably have to leave in the event of a settlement, and their leaders would prefer that they did not. For their part, Greek Cypriot business leaders and resort owners fear competition from the Turkish side of the island if the north gains official recognition. Ordinary Cypriots blame their entrenched political élites for a failure of imagination. Neshe Yashin, a Turkish-Cypriot poet and peace activist who lives on the Greek side of the island, says that the political class "are all nationalists. And not only that, they are fighters. They killed each other. This is the class...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Holes in a Hard Line | 11/5/2006 | See Source »

...recently the folks at Princeton University reassured me that, nope, it's perfectly fine and in fact entirely human. A study by psychologist Alex Todorov shows that we form opinions about a person with a 100-millisecond glance at the face alone. What's more, you can't even blame your higher brain for such bias. The impulse seems to arise in the primitive amygdala. If your prefrontal cortex is your summa cum laude lobe, the amygdala is Barney Rubble. Says Todorov: "This is a case of a high-level judgment being made by a low-level brain structure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Facing Realities | 11/5/2006 | See Source »

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