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Richard does have his shortcomings, chief among them his utter inability to beat around the bush. If a teacher is doing a bad job, Richard will say so flat out and not skimp on the details. He'll do the same for transfer students who come from colleges where bad writing gets good grades. Criticism of one's teaching or writing is never easy to take, but it is dished out as fairly in Expos as one is likely to get anywhere else. Richard's language is rich in metaphor and he has a host of stories that he uses...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Resentful Teachers Blame Marius Unfairly | 10/23/1993 | See Source »

...gets, certain programs should remain off-limits from Faculty shears. The need-blind admissions policy--which recently has been threatened at other Ivy League colleges--cannot be touched. We firmly believe that a Harvard education should be available to everyone regardless of financial need. Likewise, the Faculty shouldn't skimp on beefing up a security program that is still inadequate. In the past, administrators have tried to curtail funds for the shuttle bus and have declined to from other areas. No fiscal concerns should jeopardize students' safety...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ask the Students | 2/21/1992 | See Source »

ANOTHER OUTCOME of the collision between insurance and care is excessive technology. Since medical procedures cost patients nothing up front and little later, there is no incentive for the insured to skimp on technology. Doctors want to maximize their fees by maximizing care, and they also fear malpractice suits for missing a diagnosis. As a result, they order as many tests as they can. Patients don't pay, so they want to get the most care they can. Insurance costs went through the roof, but we didn't care because we didn't have to pay up front...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Curing All Our Nation's Ill | 10/21/1991 | See Source »

These cartoonists may skimp on elegance at times, but in doing so they reach down one's thoat and throttle one's guts. The expressive work in these cartoons leaves the reader breathless: breathless with laughter, with horror, with pain and with amazement. Some of them will deserve a place in the comics pantheon with the cartoons of Walt "Pogo" Kelly, one of the greatest stylists of all comic history...

Author: By Liam T.A. Ford, | Title: A Poignant Catalogue of Comics | 10/10/1991 | See Source »

Whatever animals get the gift of intelligence, it is the player's job to nurture and protect them, guiding their technological development by directing investments in science, medicine, agriculture and the arts. But playing the Almighty, I discover, is complicated -- and dangerous. Skimp on medical research, and your SimEarthlings are pestered by plagues. Cut back in the philosophy department, and wars break out. Let the master race linger too long in the industrial age, and the planet is choked with pollution. If, on the other hand, you steer your beings adroitly toward the ages of information and nanotechnology (molecule building...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Technology: The Day I Played God | 12/24/1990 | See Source »

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