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...soundtrack is up to date and appropriately paced, accentuating the funky demeanor of the plot while moving the film between scenes. “Everything’s Gone Green” combines typical independent film components into a unique and pleasing package that entertains and pushes the correct intellectual buttons. The ensemble effort successfully meshes thoughtful artistic film elements with honestly funny dialogue and captivating plot twists. Ryan’s bad day is certainly the start of a charming few hours...
...fired the department's top official in charge of nuclear security in response to the latest Los Alamos and earlier incidents. As Bodman put it: "Unauthorized removal of the classified material from the Lab marks a significant breach of security protocol and of the public trust. Unfortunately, we cannot correct the errors of the past. But we will learn from this incident and we will do better...
...those diseases are for forever.” Just like Harvard ruthlessly propagates itself with prefrosh weekend, so do we aspire to have our seed multiply. Just as we inherited this column from our forebears we will also solicit applications to write this column next year. Please give the correct answers to the following questions as well as a sample of a possible column you would write. E-mail submissions to thebelllap2@gmail.com. 1. Harvard Pub, will it reach its great potential, why or why not? 2. Derek C. Bok or Drew Faust, who wins in one-on-one basketball...
...shooting two people in a dormitory, would, two hours later, chain the doors of a hall, walk to the second floor, and systematically murder thirty people in four classrooms. Some accounts will conclude the rampage to be a failure of Virginia Tech’s policies to provide a correct response when a gunman is on campus. Others may describe the shootings as the result of the inability of one alienated individual to find acceptance or as the failure of a community to recognize an individual who is at the breaking point. But despite the hypotheses, what truly failed...
...needed to become effective child advocates.“In general, top-tier law schools are sending students to work for the richest and most prestigious members of society,” she says. “There is no systematic training to teach students to go out and correct injustice.”Judith S. Kaye, chief judge of New York, agrees. With many law students from schools like Harvard overlooking careers in child advocacy for positions in Washington or on Wall Street, children will remain one of the most underserved groups in the United States, she says...