Word: calendar
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With respect to academics, we will make the most of the Curricular Review. In early February, the Curricular Review committees will recommend substantial changes to core requirements, the calendar, study aboard programs and more. The current council has not done enough to include, inform or seek input from the student body. We will seek student input through campus wide surveys and open discussion forums...
...employed by everyone. Let's remind one another that humor, passion and the ability to view aging as a valuable source of knowledge help us all. We should not approach growing old with thoughts of darkness, withdrawal and rejection. We need to enjoy living, no matter what our calendar years. David A. Sorber, M.D. Madison, Wisconsin, U.S. My mother lived for 100 years and 4 months. She gave birth to all nine of her children at home. She had no special diet; in fact she ate exactly what she wanted. She came to the U.S. from Italy...
...currently set up only in North America; Microsoft and Swatch hope to roll out the service across Western Europe beginning this spring. It costs a reasonable $150, which includes free news headlines, local weather and stock market updates. An extra $60 enables the Paparazzi to receive instant messages and calendar reminders from a personal computer. And, yes, it also tells time. But don't blame us if people start asking if you're Dick Tracy...
That message alone was meant to be a source of comfort, particularly since he was also telling voters that everything had changed since the last time they elected a President and no amount of wishful thinking could turn the calendar back. After a happy and lucky decade, the U.S. is locked in a war that will last the rest of our lives. "The outcome of this election will set the direction of the war against terror," Bush said Saturday in Grand Rapids, Mich. Of Kerry, he argued that if you don't even admit...
...danger ahead in August sprang from the combined vagaries of the calendar and the campaign-finance laws. Once Kerry accepted his party's nomination at the Democratic Convention on July 29, he would be bound by a strict spending limit of $75 million in public money--a straitjacket that President George W. Bush would not have to put on until his own convention finished Sept. 2. By early June, some of Kerry's media advisers wanted to change the game...