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Word: originator (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...this creates the third problem: what about students like me who are of mixed Latin American origin? Should I join all the clubs that represent each third of my background? What if there isn't a club for one of my thirds? Should I then create one? Or should I be the founder of the Mixed Undergraduate Latinos at Harvard (MULAH) because I am so "culturally different" from other Hispanics...

Author: By Nancy RAINE Reyes, | Title: Where Do I Fit In? | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

...Harvard that I have to form a club of my own to feel like I care about who I am. I don't want to separate myself from other people who speak Spanish just because there are distinct political problems happening in the various countries that represent my origin or because there is a different dialect or slang in our common language. More and more I am feeling that to join one of these clubs would be to adhere to the belief that separation means identification, and I don't want to be identified that...

Author: By Nancy RAINE Reyes, | Title: Where Do I Fit In? | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

...have described humans as the animals who make tools, or reason, or use fire, or laugh, or any one of a dozen other appealing oversimplifications. Here's one more description for the list, as good as any other: Humans are the animals who wonder, intensely and endlessly, about their origin. Starting with a Neanderthal skeleton unearthed in Germany in 1856, archaeologists and anthropologists have sweated mightily over excavations in Africa, Europe and Asia, trying to find fossil evidence that will answer the most fundamental questions of our existence: When, where and how did the human race arise? Nonscientists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Man Began | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

...time of the Neander Valley find, Charles Darwin had not yet published his famous The Origin of Species, and evolution was still, at best, only a hazy conjecture among a handful of scientists. Indeed, most people then believed that human beings had remained essentially unchanged since creation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Neanderthal Mystery | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

...Western societies have latched on torationality, which is Western in origin," Bissonsays. "But the great Eastern societies areterribly important for knowledge of religion andphilosophy...

Author: By Bryan D. Garsten, | Title: Surveys: A Dying Breed? | 3/11/1994 | See Source »

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