Word: transformative
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KAMEO: ELEMENTS OF POWER Kameo is the name of a flirty little fairy who lives in a surreal, candy-colored never-never land. She doesn't look as though she could take on an Olsen twin, let alone the monsters marauding through her homeland, but fortunately she can transform into 10 different elemental warriors, including a flower with a very nasty attitude. Psychedelic and Zelda-esque, Kameo is the most distinctive of the 360 launch titles. It's the closest you will get to dreaming with your eyes open...
...next spring. The people will get their wish, the UC will claim a truly memorable success, and Harvard will be a richer institution. The surge of school spirit that accompanied Harvard’s defeat of Yale this past weekend was truly delightful, and a beloved mascot will help transform such pro-Harvard emotion from a once-a-year phenomenon to an unflagging affection. Furthermore, the mascot will help create a positive school spirit that is separate from the anti-Yale sentiment. I hope that at next year’s Game our cries of “Yale sucks?...
What he is now is a six-year NBA veteran, a 2002 All-Star with a career scoring average of 15 points a game. What he was then was a player with the potential to radically transform the landscape of Ivy hoops...
...ways around the problems—a lessening of France’s now-infamous racism would probably do a lot to help—but, to state the obvious fact, history has no real examples of how a society formerly of one cultural, linguistic, and ethnic mode can transform into a society where a significant number of citizens don’t accept or even actively attack the societal norms. Europe is now witnessing the first serious consequences of its collective holiday from reality. Finally it is becoming clear that the continent’s social models as currently...
...Iraq and Afghanistan, and potential conflicts looming in North Korea and Iran-to say nothing of China's military buildup-allies are a must for the U.S. In that context, says Adam Ward of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, some U.S. strategists would like to transform Japan into "the U.K. of Asia"-a regional power on which the U.S. can rely not only for diplomatic support, but for military assistance all over the globe. It's a nice idea, but Ward insists that the analogy ignores the deeply shared roots between the U.S. and Britain...