Word: sighteness
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...inversions, which may be why some Harvard professors have so eagerly joined the “devil’s party.” But let’s not get ahead of ourselves: Look again at the full-scale map. Keep it always within reach and often within sight. Don’t let any course or discussion of the Middle East proceed except in its presence. And if the need arises, ask why Arabs and Muslims think they deserve odds greater than 640:1.Ruth R. Wisse is Peretz Professor Yiddish Literature and Professor of Comparative Literature...
...when A. Jean Ayres, a University of Southern California (USC) psychologist and occupational therapist, published the first book on the condition. As defined by Ayres and others, SPD is a mixed bag of syndromes, but all involve difficulty handling information that comes in through the senses--not merely hearing, sight, smell, taste and touch, but also the proprioceptive and vestibular senses, which tell us where our arms and legs are in relation to the rest of us and how our body is oriented toward gravity. Some kids treated for SPD can't maintain an upright position at a desk; some...
...dismay, I found myself shopping for a Halloween costume in mid-September for fear there would be none the week before the holiday. Lo and behold, the last week in October, I saw a shift from pumpkins and scarecrows to elves and ornaments - not a costume in sight, and Thanksgiving had just been left in the dust. It's disheartening that holidays have become a retailer's trap for the consumer and that we've lost their real meaning altogether. I am trying desperately to separate the real from the retail for my 2-year...
...said Claudia F. Schreier ’08, a TV watcher, over dinner in Adams House yesterday. “I can find something to do with the hour I have each week.” But with still no end to the four-week-long strike in sight, fans of “The Office,” “The Colbert Report,” “The Late Show with David Letterman,” and other popular shows are bracing for an onslaught of reruns. And “Heroes” fans Claire...
...holidays [Nov.19]. I shopped for a Halloween costume in mid-September for fear there would be none the week before the holiday. Lo and behold, the last week in October, I saw a shift from pumpkins and scarecrows to elves and ornaments--not a costume in sight, and Thanksgiving had just been left in the dust. It's disheartening that holidays have become a retailer's trap for the consumer and that we've lost their real meaning altogether. I had to chuckle while reading the article because just a couple of days before...