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Thieves can clone any car by writing down its VIN--which is required by law to be displayed on the bottom of the dashboard and is also found on parts of the frame--and using bar-code software, high-quality home printers and metal-stamping tools to create identical tags for a stolen car of the same make and model. If a car has duplicated tags, a police officer running the VIN through his computer during a routine traffic stop can't tell that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High-Tech Thievery: The Car Cloners | 4/11/2005 | See Source »

...Crimson got on the scoreboard in the bottom of the fifth. Senior Cecily Gordon stroked a single into right field to lead off the frame before being pulled for pinch runner Sarah Shaughnessy. Shortstop Lauren Brown knocked an RBI single into center to plate Shaughnessy, who had moved to second on a sacrifice...

Author: By Jonathan Lehman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Madick’s Arm Helps Softball Split With Yale | 4/11/2005 | See Source »

Christoph Cardinal Schönborn was standing tall among the faithful. Just minutes after John Paul II's funeral ended, the 60-year-old Austrian was moving briskly through a thick crowd along the ancient Borgo Santo Spirito. With his flowing scarlet robes, robust frame and handsome features, the Austrian Cardinal attracted calls of "Cardinale, Cardinale" from several young Italians, even though they seemed not to know which Cardinal he was. But my colleague Jordan Bonfante and I knew, and we followed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Last Audience With the Pope | 4/10/2005 | See Source »

Senior Beth Sabin led off the frame with a homer to right. Brown walked and Stefanchik reached first on an error, bumping Brown to third. Stefanchik pulled off her first of three steals on the day, swiping second right before Kidderlaunched a homer over the right-field fence—the first homer of her collegiate career...

Author: By Elyse N. Hanson, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Sweep Success | 4/8/2005 | See Source »

Video games, like all other art, form the lens through which we see the world, the patterns of subconscious thought that stir beneath our eyes and frame what we see and what we do not. What happens when a generation of children is more familiar with video games than any other form of art, including the art of conversation? What happens when children are vastly more comfortable with simulations than with narratives? What happens when a significant portion of a generation’s experiences of pleasure derive from what is essentially the subconscious insinuation of algorithms? What happens when...

Author: By Jorian P. Schutz, | Title: You Are What You Play | 4/8/2005 | See Source »

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