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...layout boasts several new features, including an improved course shopping tool that allows students direct access to course schedules, syllabi and CUE Guide ratings...

Author: By Laura A. Morris, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: College Web Portal Expands Features | 9/17/2004 | See Source »

...tide me over until graduation. Maybe it’s just the people I know, but I think a lot of people look at Harvard the way I did. They may not be motivated by politics and activism the way I am, but they see Harvard as a tool, a path to something else, whether that something else is medical school, an I-banking job or a more humane world...

Author: By Sam M. Simon, | Title: There's No Place Like School | 9/17/2004 | See Source »

...back into power. The tax system remains a mess; it's neither fair nor simple nor good for the economy. Investment in the future is miserly. Students should be getting better teaching and facilities for their $A100,000 university degrees. The spread of broadband - which will be a dynamic tool in the new economy - is woefully slow. But it's not that kind of election. Perhaps next time the economic ideas contest will be more inspiring. It certainly will be more urgent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Can Keep the Good Times Rolling? | 9/14/2004 | See Source »

KERRY Whereas Bush tries to use tax policy to spur growth, Kerry sees it as a tool of social intervention. His main proposal would raise taxes for those earning more than $200,000 a year and use that money to fund tax credits for college tuition and child care. Kerry takes a further swipe at offshore outsourcing with a proposal to start taxing corporate income earned in other countries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Campaign '04: Bush and Kerry: Whose Plan Is Better? | 9/13/2004 | See Source »

...called whole-body scans were originally used as a last-resort diagnostic tool to find hidden tumors in patients with cancer. But then the tests caught on among the healthy hypervigilant, who were drawn in growing numbers to walk-in clinics by aggressive TV and radio ads. In 2002, two years after Oprah Winfrey got scanned--and bubbled enthusiastically about the experience--32 million Americans shelled out as much as $1,000 apiece to get their bodies X-rayed in thin slices and reassembled into 3-D images detailed enough to show every blemish, scar and incipient tumor. The numbers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Health: Danger: Body Scans | 9/13/2004 | See Source »

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