Word: somehow
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...Gates and Stephen Greenblatt and Michael Sandel—by offering the experience to anyone who signs up, students might feel slightly duped, despite it having no direct effect on them?MJS: I don’t think you should worry that giving others access to distance learning will somehow dilute or devalue the college experience. Even at its best, distance learning can’t replace what goes on when students and teachers gather, in-person, in the classroom, in a lab, or around a seminar table. If it can, then something is wrong with...
...Census marked the first time that people could identify with different race groups—thus, the United States recognizes 63 races based on self-identification, arising from six individual categories and the 57 possible combinations thereof. We could apply this logic to different ethnicities—but somehow it seems preposterous to think that creating a different ethnicity for every single combination of eleven Asian groups (that’s 2,047 possible “ethnicities”) will mean a damn thing...
...thinks of his decision, Pilbeam’s conduct amounts to an utter and total sandbagging of the undergraduate community. But even if one gets past the manner in which the nixing of the Party Fund was handled, University Hall’s assertion that the campus will be somehow “safer” without it is extremely dubious. In reality, it appears from his letter that Pilbeam left a crucial element of student safety completely out of his calculus.Quashing UC-funded parties—which occur on campus and in areas regulated by the College?...
...types women to the forefront. What makes Ulrich’s book insightful as well as worthwhile are the details she provides. Extensive not only in the timeframe it covers, but in the diversity of women Ulrich discusses, the book touches on many female figures throughout history whose stories somehow relate to the lives and works of Ulrich’s three archetypal women.Ulrich’s examination of the so-called “Amazon”—a woman combative in many realms, whether displaying courage for her country in time of war or raging...
...weird," says Emily Mortimer, who plays Lars' aggressively loving sister-in-law Karin. "The other thing that dumbfounds me and irritates me a tiny bit is that he managed to be sexy. How can you be playing this weird, overweight guy in galoshes who's socially inept and somehow be a movie star as you're doing it?" It takes an actor who excels at contradiction--a Jewish anti-Semite, a do-gooder drug addict--to pull off the hunky-freak trick. It also helps if he is, in real life, a bit of an oddball...