Word: printings
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...said. “You didn’t have to go out and rent a tux if you didn’t want to.” Black dresses and tuxes remained popular, but some students branched out: outfits included a nurse costume and leopard-print hats...
...hooked and beaky, his mischievous smile a little snaggle-toothed. His hair is midlength and floppy, la David Spade. He still wears his trademark white suit, accessorized with some kind of high-gloss old-timey shoes, but it hangs a little loose on him. When he reads small print he dons a pair of white-framed glasses...
Camm used an online link from thefacebook.com to register in Massachusetts. She brought a print-out to the polls confirming her registration, but a poll worker in Quincy told Camm she could not vote because she did not have the required Mass. ID number...
This is not a partisan argument. The endorsements are so beneficial because they are among the most well researched, clearly grounded opinions available in print. News shows such as “Crossfire” pretend to give information, but instead spiral into a screamfest with no logical layout of the issues. It’s not hard to find profiles of the candidate’s platforms. The Washington Post, for example, has run a series of editorials called “The Choice” comparing Bush’s and Kerry’s views on various...
It’s all well and good for newspapers to print editorials on other important issues, but when it comes to choosing a candidate some people are decidedly uncomfortable with the idea. Critics claim these staff opinions introduce even more bias to an already biased news media. This criticism would have weight if these endorsements ran on page one, or anywhere under the heading of news. Instead they run on the opinion page where they belong, where voters looking for guidance can find...