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...were up against Firefox's very successful earlier versions, so they plucked a few key elements for the IE7 design. For starters, the navigation bar of the browser takes up very little room, allowing more space for the websites themselves. The familiar buttons-refresh, home, favorites and one-touch print-are all nestled in, but when you start it up, IE7 doesn't display the "menu bar," containing all of the deeper options people tend not to use on a daily basis...
...deterred from fudging their resumes after reading the College application’s clause that “any intentionally inaccurate information will...be cause for recision of any offer of admission or...revocation of course credit, course grades, and degree.” But has the fine print ever been put into action? Registrar of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Barry S. Kane says that he and his colleagues have not dealt with diploma revocation, although it may have happened sometime in Harvard’s history. But if a serious incident of fraud were to occur, Kane...
...should ask why people visit blogs for information instead of getting their news from larger, mainstream media like newspapers. It is because organizations lose credibility when they make judgments that are wrong. I got the impression that Kinsley wants journalists to be above accountability, that no matter what they print they are above it all. But the marketplace decides which products survive and which don't. William Rolston Vancouver, Canada...
...have had some success, at least at the bookstore. The granddaddy of the genre, Sugar Blues by William Dufty, came out in 1975 and flew to No. 1 on the best-sellers list. Sugar Busters, which became a publishing phenomenon in 1995, boasts more than 5 million copies in print...
...sitting room of his official residence last Wednesday, Vice President Dick Cheney sat down with TIME's Mike Allen and James Carney for a rare print interview. Excerpts...