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...sign, some complain, that Miami's sun-soaked complacency has addled its political leaders as well. "Planning is disdained as the enemy here," says Gihan Perera, director of the Miami Workers Center. Local anger boiled over recently at a housing scandal that Perera's group helped the Miami Herald expose: Miami-Dade's government housing agency paid millions of dollars to politically connected developers for low-income projects that were never built or were used to construct private condominiums instead. "This is a greedy city," says Yvonne Stratford, 52, an unemployed seafood-warehouse worker who had hoped to live...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letter From Miami: There's Trouble--Lots Of It--in Paradise | 11/19/2006 | See Source »

...yard line during the second quarter of the game. Affectionately named “The Blob,” said balloon was emblazoned with the school’s name. “MIT 1, Harvard-Yale 0,” read the headline in the Boston Herald the next...

Author: By Jessica M. Luna, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: HARVARD-YALE PRANKS | 11/15/2006 | See Source »

...question is whether the PS3 is the herald of Stringer's revitalized company, or a techno-turkey that will drag down profits for years. Sony envisions PS3 as much more of an entertainment command center than a box to play video games. It features a ferociously fast computer chip, the Cell, a high-definition Blu-ray disc player, a hard drive and Web browser. In Sony's view, you'll use the PS3 to play games, watch movies and surf the Web. You'll be so dazzled by the hi-def images that you'll want to upgrade your...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Has Sony Got Game? | 11/8/2006 | See Source »

...writer is an editorial cartoonist for the Brown Daily Herald...

Author: By Roxanne Palmer | Title: Evidence For Cartoonist’s Firing Is Flimsy At Best | 11/3/2006 | See Source »

Long, long ago (circa 1979) an institution was born at Harvard College. It was named “The Core,” and its coming was prophesized to herald a golden age in the education of collegiate pupils. Under its benevolent rule, simple undergraduates would be transformed from ignorant savages into enlightened cosmopolitans who no longer sought to gain the easy A, but rather to enrich their existence with knowledge of the ages. All that was needed was absolute submission?...

Author: By Steven T. Cupps | Title: Liberating the Liberal Arts | 10/24/2006 | See Source »

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