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...that people shouldn't be fired from their jobs just because they are gay. But what if that job is to take care of your son on a Boy Scouts' camping trip? He may need comforting after a nightmare, or a pat on the back when he skins his knee. You may know rationally that gays are no more likely to molest children than are heterosexuals. And you may know that virtually all psychiatrists have agreed for years that kids can't be "turned" gay. But your gut may say something else, something biased...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can A Scout Be Gay? | 5/1/2000 | See Source »

Doran, whose season was unfortunately a short one due to a persistent knee injury that kept him off the court until spring, will most likely keep playing. He has hinted that he will turn professional...

Author: By Rahul Rohatgi, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: M. Tennis Rolls Over Big Green in Season Finale | 4/27/2000 | See Source »

...form of new and utterly unexpected technology. America in the 21st century? No, London in the 19th. Some apocryphal Victorian, so the story goes, looked at the rate at which the number of horses on city streets was increasing and assured his peers that their capital would soon be knee-deep in horse manure. He got it wrong, largely because he failed to predict the imminent rise of the automobile. That brought its own problems, of course, but the point was that Victorians were blindsided by the future--which, as any would-be Cassandra soon learns, is seldom what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Mother Nature Should Love Cyberspace | 4/26/2000 | See Source »

...Imagine a sculpture four feet taller than this hoop," McVearry says. That's the size of the David sculpture. The young sculptors are barely the height of the figure's knee...

Author: By Sarah A. Dolgonos, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: adfda | 4/21/2000 | See Source »

...professional dance aspirations. "I was getting over an injury," she recalls, "and sort of figuring out that ballet wasn't necessarily the world I wanted to be in. It was the ninth time I had been seriously injured—I'd had stress fractures, sprained ankles, bad knee problems that I knew I would be looking forward to during my career...

Author: By Debra P. Hunter, | Title: Fifteen Minutes: Dance, Little Lady: Harvard's ballerinas express themselves | 4/20/2000 | See Source »

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