Word: paragraphed
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Regarding the April 3 article "Every Town is Our Town," it is format to see that he still has none of the "mutual respect" he so piously mentions in his last paragraph. I refer, of course, to his line in the next-to-last paragraph that "they like to assure me that all of us here at Harvard are born-and-bred snobs just as they assume that we all live on Beacon Hill and who prepped at Andover and Exeter." Mr. Wurf is implying that all those who live on Beacon Hill and who prepped at Andover and Exeter...
Along the way, Spock became the first of the anti-expert experts. His own best seller on child care cautions mothers to take even his tips with several grains of salt. In all editions, the first paragraph of the book begins, "You know more than you think you do," and the next paragraph says, "Don't be overawed by what the experts say. Don't be afraid to trust your own common sense." A friendly and homey prose style, at once humble and authoritative, has convinced millions of mothers that he is an author who can be trusted...
...truth in this paragraph consists in the fact that in a literal sense such a poster did exist. It announced the first meeting of the spring semester and was intended merely to be eye-catching and humorous. In light of the apparent willingness of certain segments of the Harvard community to exploit any potentially suggestive statements made by the GLSA in order to denigrate the gay community, such a poster was perhaps unwise. In is distressing, however, to feel the need to take such idiocy seriously, but it is more distressing, and also frightening, to know that there are Harvard...
...this same page of "Cheap Shots" The Salient' printed another paragraph which questioned the necessity and validity having the GLSA office phone number in the front of the Harvard-Radcliffe Student Telephone Directory. The ignorance and lack of understanding of the needs of approximates proximately 10 percent of the Harvard community displayed in this instance are absolutely astounding...
...general litigious impulse in our society, or to the publicity given to strikingly high jury damage awards. In part, the press has itself to blame: the multimillion-dollar awards in recent cases have commanded headlines, but the reversals or drastic reductions in damages typically have rated a paragraph back among the want...