Word: easiest
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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First, and perhaps easiest to write off as chance oversight, is the misspelling of names and titles. The Crimson's plea that it is impossible to be perfect under tight deadlines with volunteer reporting might seem to hold water. However, some cases are harder to excuse. James T.L. Grimmelmann '99 claims that his name has been misspelled repeatedly over the years. He has brought it to the editors' attention before, but it happened yet again in the Goldwater Scholarship article on April 3, even after he specifically emphasized the second "n" in his last name to the reporter. Similarly, friends...
...almost the end of the term, and you're not going to take it anymore. After an entire shopping week's worth of market research searching for the best, most interesting, most useful or easiest courses to take, you now realize how wrong everyone was. That so-called "gut" required far more guts than you expected. That purportedly "lucid and inspiring" professor made you wish that you were less than lucid during class. Or maybe the entire experience would have been just dandy, had it not been for the Teaching Fellow from Hell. In short, you were duped. Wronged. Spurned...
...them tribes," he says. Yet even if tribalism is an inadequate term, it does speak to an emerging and explosive phenomenon in other parts of the world. Fragmentation, Balkanization, the dissolution of states: at a time of blurry borders and contested nationhood, ethnicity may become the most common--and easiest--organizing principle for nation builders. In the next century, conflagrations of apparent tribalism will not be set off by old ethnic rivalries as much as by contemporary political struggles--struggles that power-hungry leaders will use to inflame tensions among groups. Says Bizimana: "We have to understand that politics based...
...does not need to take a holiday or special meal; a dinner or a moment in the mail room can be the perfect time for religious discussion. "Individual investigation and dialogue is certainly the easiest and most common mode to interact," said Tarissa Mitchell '99, chair of the Harvard-Radcliffe Baha'i Association. "The challenge is to realize that your belief is a part of your entire life and how you do everything--not just how you interact with members of your own religious community...
Another, less popular response to the problem is giving extra change to the homeless. However, the easiest way that all of us can help is simply by acknowledging these people's presence...