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...Queen. Charles (played with a dense delicacy by Alex Jennings) is the one member of the family immediately and deeply stricken by the news of Diana's death. He grieves for her, as his parents first refuse his request to go to Paris to identify the body then suggest he get there not on the royal jet but by connecting commercial flights. When the others attack Diana's skills as a mother, Charles makes pointed remarks about the love she showered on her two sons, unlike his own mother. (Now, now, Corliss, give Elizabeth her due: she has trained...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Royal Family: Inside Edition | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

Some may say that even the best efforts of a group of students in a battleground state won’t change the course of an election. But past campaign efforts of the HRC and the Dems would suggest otherwise. Durring the 2004 Presidential campaign, the Dems made 22,000 phone calls and knocked on hundreds of doors, contributing to New Hampshire’s switching from voting for George W. Bush in 2000 to John F. Kerry in 2004. Kerry’s slim three percent margin of victory in New Hampshire, however, also testifies to the dedicated efforts...

Author: By Kyle A. Krahel and Colin J. Motley | Title: A Season for Political Involvement | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

...influenced by Douglass’ million dollar contribution to the new Dental School building, will someone at Harvard please provide a detailed explanation as to why the investigators decided to exonerate Douglass before this matter sullies Harvard’s reputation completely? If this cannot be done, then I suggest that President Bok organize a totally independent second inquiry, with a panel drawn from scientists with no affiliation to either Harvard or the U.S. water fluoridation program. SAMUEL S. EPSTEIN Chicago, IL September 19, 2006 The writer is professor emeritus of environmental and occupational medicine at the University of Illinois...

Author: By Samuel S. Epstein, | Title: Harvard Inquiry Into Fluoride Study Problematic | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

...ones choosing the textbooks, based on what they believe is best for their students’ education. According to a recently released Zogby International study, professors are requiring the materials they believe can help their students succeed—new textbooks and supplemental tools—which suggest professors believe the price of success outweighs the cost of failure. As the cost of higher education continues to escalate, America’s publishers are helping students get the most out of their tuition dollar by responding to changing needs and helping them do their best. Thanks to industry innovations...

Author: By Stacy M. Scarazzo, | Title: Publishers Work Hard To Keep Textbook Prices Low | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

...student body must face every day. But then again, we’re hard-pressed to think of any hardship facing women on this campus that this Women’s Center can possibly solve. Or maybe, as 300th Anniversary University Professor Laurel Thatcher Ulrich seemed to suggest at the center’s grand opening, it is a sort of reparation that Harvard has paid to compensate for its historical exclusion of women. But on reflection the sheer inanity of that justification seems obvious. In reality, the Women’s Center, born of Larry Summers’ guilt...

Author: By Brian J. Rosenberg and Andrew M. Trombly, S | Title: What’s in a Name? | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

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