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...from a scholarly perspective, she credits the book with “lead[ing] people to ask questions?? about the Church like “if that’s not true, what else haven’t we been told?” King explains Da Vinci Code’s phenomenal success by suggesting that people look for meaning by thinking about the body and sexuality in a Christian way. Women, she thinks, find comfort in the idea of a married woman with a baby as an alternate figure to the polarized female models of virgins...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ruffling Religious Feathers | 2/11/2004 | See Source »

...those Massachusetts legislators out there, I have a few questions??who stands to benefit from such an amendment? Is this a paternalistic piece of legislation, meant to save the souls of those whose liberty it curtails? Is this a semantic argument? Perhaps Webster has the final say as to who can marry. Must we call homosexual marriages something else? Maybe it’s a piece of legislation meant to preserve the morality of the state...

Author: By Michael A. Feldstein, | Title: A Victimless Crime | 2/10/2004 | See Source »

...isn’t perfect, and I don’t think that it should be taken as the golden mean—the answer to all the questions??but it’s not the only one that is used to arrive to an improvement to what goes on in the Houses. It’s one of the many ways in which we try to understand student’s attitudes toward the tutors who are very close to them,” Pertile said...

Author: By Risheng Xu, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Students Judge House Tutors in Surveys | 1/21/2004 | See Source »

There is a third method of dealing with examination questions??that is by the use of overpowering assumption, an assumption so cosmic that it is sometimes accepted. For example, we wrote that it was pretty obvious that the vague generality was the key device in any discussion of examination writing. Why is it obvious? As a matter of fact, it wasn’t obvious at all, but just an arbitrary point from which to start. This is an example of an unwarranted assumption...

Author: By Donald Carswell, | Title: Beating the System | 1/16/2004 | See Source »

...Tuesday. He faced his last Veterans’ Day like each Nov. 11 before it—with solemn pride. He served the Navy in the Pacific during World War II, where his ship struck a mine and sank. He survived to a Purple Heart and a multitude of questions??first among them, why he deserved a different fate than those shipmates who died in the 12 hours before rescue arrived. As a religious man, such questions were supposed to have answers...

Author: By Blake Jennelle, | Title: My Veteran's Days | 11/17/2003 | See Source »

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