Word: todayã
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...called it “a tremendous vote of intellectual astuteness” that the six faculty members of the General Education committee, none of whom primarily study religion, recognized the importance of the field in today??s world...
...work in progress. According to two members of the docket committee that determines the agenda of faculty meetings—University Professor Laurel Thatcher Ulrich and Judith L. Ryan, Weary professor of German and comparative literature—the task force is prepared to revise the draft between today??s meetings and the next full faculty meeting, on Dec. 12. Professors from various disciplines have begun to make suggestions for revision. In the Economics Department, according to Chair and Professor James H. Stock, faculty members believe the report overlooks the importance of their field in general education...
...outtakes depicted a songwriter eager to win over the whole world with his delicate sensibilities, the “Wowee Zowee” detritus belongs to a man afraid to win in the game of music. It’s a story that’s the bands of today??s “indie” explosion would do well to study, as well as anyone else who’s willing to break out their decoder rings and sort through the album.—Reviewer Abe J. Riesman can be reached at riesman@fas.harvard.edu...
Proposed response to phase three: chime in (ironically) that you can’t believe that this maniacal, lying, murdering President, who is ruining America’s legacy abroad, has yet to be impeached. Finish with a nod to the trials and tribulations of being a liberal in today??s society. Your irony will undoubtedly be lost on the assumer, but at least you’ll get a laugh out of the experience...
...America’s youth have historically voted at a far lower rate than the general population, but that is beginning to change. Today??s “apathetic youth” consists of about 27 million eligible voters who understand the importance of voting and political activism—59 percent disagreed with the statement that “political involvement rarely has tangible results.” The youth vote dramatically exceeded expectations in the 2004 election as turnout jumped 11 percentage points from 2000—the highest jump in any age group?...