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...Bois Institute presents a panel discussion between Tricia Rose (who recently published Longing to Tell), Gail Wyatt, Beverly Guy-Sheftall and moderator Evelynn Hammonds. Free and open to the public. 4 p.m. Science Center...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NO HEADLINE | 4/23/2004 | See Source »

...citizens—and maybe even some Harvard students—will be among the first gay couples in the country to marry makes the matter seem much more real. If the SJC lets its ruling stand, the question of gay marriage will pass quickly from the realm of panel discussions and philosophical debate to the realm of Massachusetts residents’ daily lives as homosexual couples begin to enjoy a right heterosexual couples take largely for granted. The state of Massachusetts is extremely close to taking a crucial step forward in the history of the nation. We are disappointed...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: Gay Marriage Sooner, Not Later | 4/22/2004 | See Source »

Turner was late for the panel and Williams filled in until he arrived, eliciting applause from the audience...

Author: By Andrea M. Larocca, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Black Women’s Group Names Man of Year | 4/19/2004 | See Source »

...cultiest, NBC's one-season high school dramedy Freaks and Geeks, was just released in a massive collectors' compilation through freaksandgeeks.com Shipped in an 80-page "yearbook," the eight-disc set includes all 18 episodes, audition tapes, Museum of Television and Radio panel discussions, a never shot episode script, and commentary tracks by the producers, writers, studio executives, actors--and even the actors' parents. It is one of the most insanely complete TV artifacts ever and, at $120, one of the most expensive. (A more modest, six-disc set sells in stores for about $70.) Executive producer Judd Apatow says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: It's Not TV. It's TV on DVD | 4/19/2004 | See Source »

...strike inside the U.S., the warning didn't spur more action from the President. Commission member Richard Ben-Veniste, a Democrat, told TIME that he and like-minded panelists intend to press ahead with questions on "what occurred [inside the White House] between Aug. 6 and Sept. 11." Panel members will probably ask why the President didn't cut his vacation short or order emergency meetings with Robert Mueller, then the new FBI director. "Once you see the PDB, given what you already know," says Ben-Veniste, "you'll have to make a determination of whether it was exclusively historical...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Probing The Memo | 4/19/2004 | See Source »

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