Word: whatã
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...don’t think I can.14.FM: How’s it feel to work at The New York Times? Why do you like working there?WS: First of all, I work at home, not at the Times building, though I go in once in a while. What??s it like? What I love about The New York Times is the quality of the audience. I know that the Times audience can answer just about anything I throw at them.15.FM: Do crossword puzzle-makers have a special affinity for Arlo Guthrie? He definitely appears more than once...
...half of the directorship of this year’s Sunken Garden Children’s Theatre (SGCT) production, an adaptation of “Hansel and Gretel.” “Funny voices, falling down and—Oh, God—what??s the third!? I’m sure Mary can tell you.” “Mike said funny voices, falling down, and what??s the third?” asks Mary E. Birnbaum ’07, Hoagland’s co-director...
...that can’t happen because of this distance, so they have to use the language to touch each other. The language literally becomes like a caress... CH: The make-out session... LB: But through words, because we have to be held apart and that’s what??s so exciting about it. CH: Once you really take the time to memorize the words and the big monologues, all of a sudden, you’re saying it for the fourth time and it clicks. Suddenly, [you realize] this is what he means...
...however, if Happy was simply self-aware or straight up vain. Audience member and Johnstone Family Professor in the Department of Psychology Steven A. Pinker, however, maintains that different standards apply. “We don’t worry about foxes hurting bunnies the way we worry about what??s happening in Darfur and Iraq.” Panelist Cass R. Sunstein ’75, professor of jurisprudence at the University of Chicago Law School, says he was “puzzling a lot” over another scenario offered during the discussion: is it ethical...
...What??s even more worrisome is that when transatlantic air-travel is deregulated under the “Open Skies” treaty, which comes into effect in less than a year, traffic across the pond could increase by as much as 55 percent, according to estimates published in USA Today. The treaty will enable airlines to apply the ultra-cheap model to much longer, more heavily polluting flights...