Word: intentionalism
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Although the demonstrators denied having violent intent, they surely had plans for any photographs they could take of laborers being hired on the street. The pictures would have been sent to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and posted on websites like wehirealiens.com The hope was that doing so would put the heat on U.S. employers who hire some of the 11 million illegal immigrants in the U.S. and on the immigrants themselves, forcing them out of business...
...developers aren’t willing to take on the potential risk?Lest we think this is only a problem for us laypeople, it should be noted that the record labels might also feel uneasy about Grokster: the inducement standard is sufficiently vague to allow those with genuinely malicious intent easy loopholes. i2hub and Grokster may have shut down, but Morpheus and LimeWire both felt they could sufficiently protect themselves simply by adding disclaimers (which seem likely to be rather ineffective in practice). Despite that it has been nearly five months since Grokster was decided, we’re just...
...candidates, two unofficial tickets have already emerged—including two hopefuls who have already faced off at lower levels of council politics. Neither pair of presidential and vice-presidential running mates have submitted the 150 student signatures that would make their candidacies official. But they have signalled their intentions to run by submitting letters of intent to run, and circulating emails asking for support. One of the tickets includes John S. Haddock ’07, vice-chair of the Student Affairs Committee (SAC), as a candidate for president, and former UC member Annie R. Riley...
...with only keyboards, a guitar, and two drum sets. While in general a second drummer on stage means either a gimmick or an inability to keep rhythm, these performers actually put them to good use, creating some very heady interplay with the frequently dive-bombing synthesizers. The group seemed intent on nothing less than a total sensory experience, decked out in blacklight-optimized garb and bombarding the audience with bizarre animations on the projection screen behind the stage. While these visuals added to the atmosphere, they really were not necessary; the music was doing the heavy lifting. At once melodic...
...White House press secretary Scott McClellan, standing in the wings with his South Korean counterpart, called on Caren Bohan of Reuters to ask the second question from the U.S. David E. Sanger of The New York Times, the press corps' leader in covering North Korean nuclear issue, was so intent on asking a question that he accepted the microphone when it was handed to Bohan. "You can go ahead and grab the mike if you want to," Bush joshed. "But I didn't know you were called "Caren.' " On the contrary, among his prank-happy fellow reporters, Sanger is likely...