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Word: contentively (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...book The Content of Our Character, Steele promoted the notion that the U.S. suffers from "race fatigue." America may be tired, but Steele seems exhausted. He now reminds us blacks why we view his analysis as suspect and influenced by self-hate. Steele seems desperate to transfer his racial baggage to Obama. Steele places him in a racial box and then explains to us why he belongs there, refusing to accept that Obama can authentically view himself as an individual who happily lives his life as a black man embracing the American Dream. Steele's simplistic labels ("bargainers" and "challengers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inbox | 12/19/2007 | See Source »

...life. While Stein Clubs implicitly condone the idea of alcohol as a means to stimulate social interaction, they should not overemphasize the need for this social lubricant as justification for serving rum and Coke or vodka screwdrivers. There is no reason why anyone would need drinks with high alcohol content in order to socially connect with other members of their House. In fact, the greater chance of intoxication that comes with drinking hard liquor detracts from the House unity that Stein Clubs are supposed to generate. How can you bond with the other members of your House if you cannot...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Spirit Sans Spirits | 12/17/2007 | See Source »

...mathematical, geographic, semantic, factual, autobiographical, ethical and religious. All seven provided some useful data, but only the ones relating to math and ethics produced results clear enough to give a vivid picture of the way the simple and the complex, the subjective and the objective intertwine. Regardless of their content, statements that the subjects believed lit up the ventral medial prefrontal cortex (VMPC), a location in the brain best known for processing reward, emotion and taste. Equally "primitive" areas associated with taste, pain perception and disgust determined disbelief. "False propositions may actually disgust us," Harris writes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Your Brain Looks Like on Faith | 12/14/2007 | See Source »

...content people don’t quite grasp the use of full. sentences. In order to placate those “writers” who like to hoard words for themselves, we have compiled a list of our favorite design keyboard shortcuts: 5. Apple + +, Apple + - : For all your zoom in/zoom out needs, obvi. 4. Apple + Shift + I: Not to be confused with Apple + I, which has probably never been used in the history of Photoshop. 3. Apple + D: Useful in both InDesign and Photoshop. 2. Apple + Z, Apple + Z, Apple + Z, Apple + Z, Apple + Z, Apple + Z, Apple + Z, Apple...

Author: By Mariah A. Bush, Alan C. Chiu, and Amy Y. Ren, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Designers and Photogs | 12/14/2007 | See Source »

...tracks purchased through the iTunes Music Store. This is “copy protection” software, and he notes that it can complicate the loading and unloading of books from the Kindle. But two bigger problems with DRM aren’t mentioned: First, it ties the purchased content forever to the device which “reads” it, and second, it prohibits “fair use,” or the limited legal usage of copyrighted works, and undermines the first sale doctrine...

Author: By G. parker Higgins | Title: When Judging Amazon’s Kindle, DRM Is Crucial | 12/14/2007 | See Source »

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