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Word: skillfully (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...welcome new challenges," says Frances Y.Feldman, administrator of the Germanic Languagesand Literatures department, who sees there-technology as a way to "increase [her own]skill...

Author: By Andrew K. Mandel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Antique No More: Registrar Revamps Technology | 3/2/1998 | See Source »

Requires absolutely no skill, just the ability to get excited and yell "NO WHAMMIES" repeatedly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: comeback wisdom | 2/26/1998 | See Source »

...competition inherent in video games also contributes to the real-life hierarchy of players, battling to be alpha-male. Eli B. Richlin '01 boasts, "Being able to beat my roommate at a game of skill, such as `Red Alert' or `Madden' 98,' reinforces my superiority and my prominence in the pecking order." His roommate, Michael L. O'Byrne '01, can only defend himself by jibing, "[Winning at video games] is a means by which some can compensate for other inadequacies in their lives...

Author: By Susana E. Canseco, | Title: The Cult of the Video Game | 2/26/1998 | See Source »

...years of assault on affirmative action and other aspects of civil rights enforcement were also an era when young college-educated blacks lost ground relative to whites. This is true both for earnings and for prospects of employment. Yet this was a time of narrowing black-white gaps in skill and achievement. I am persuaded by political economist Martin Carnoy's claim in his important book Faded Dreams, that Reagan-Bush policies hostile to civil rights and affirmative action opened the door to greater racial discrimination especially against the youngest black entrants (even very well-educated ones) into the labor...

Author: By Lawrence D. Bobo, | Title: Speaking Truth to Power on the Subject of Race | 2/24/1998 | See Source »

Third, poor and working class African-Americans face barriers to opportunity based in both class and race. All workers irrespective of race, especially low-skill workers, have seen an increasingly globalized, high technology economy, much facilitated by laissez-faire social policy, drive down their wages and standard of living. Nonetheless, research involving carefully designed audits (i.e., matched pairs of job applicants), as well as systematic surveys and in-depth interviews of low-skill employers speak loudly on the subject of race: direct racial bias against African-Americans exists today. Continued race bias in the labor market and residential segregation help...

Author: By Lawrence D. Bobo, | Title: Speaking Truth to Power on the Subject of Race | 2/24/1998 | See Source »

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