Word: wonders
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...Junior Parents’ Weekend Committee and, indirectly, Your Tuition Checks.”) The question is appropriate, given that students without financial support from Harvard had to dole out $18,350 for tuition, room, board, fees and health insurance for the spring semester alone. Parents are forced to wonder whether they should have sent their children to a public school for a fraction of the cost—the University of California at Berkeley, for example, costs about $22,400 a year for an out-of-state student and $3,663 for a resident of the Golden State. Would...
...Jackson the day King was assassinated. Samuel Kyles later opened a Memphis office of Jackson's Operation PUSH. The younger Kyles served on the successful U.S. House campaign of Jesse Jackson Jr. Kyles' ex-wife worked on Jackson's staff and was once an attorney for musician Stevie Wonder...
...Amnesty International was quick to sound alarm bells. Asma Jahangir, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary and Arbitrary Executions, has expressed "deep concern" over the slaughter. Thaksin defends his campaign, and no wonder: a recent national poll taken by the respected Rajabaht Institute registered a 90% approval rating for the drug war. The average Thai family, apparently, wants the scum off the streets, even if they depart in body bags. (The Prime Minister did say last week that he would appoint a panel to monitor the drug-suppression drive...
...wonder what is implied by that “etc.” Deanships, maybe? That’s some pretty strong incentivizing. Now, I know from experience that online surveys are mostly about getting your e-mail address. But Harry R. Lewis already has my e-mail address. What does he want with me? I go to the link given in his e-mail, and a page pops up that reads “Welcome Madeleine Elfenbein,” and in smaller letters, “If you are not Madeleine Elfenbein, please click here...
...likely to be small ones, since Harvard doesn’t change easily, and it doesn’t change much. Yet some things are bound to change: modern students are the great 20th century innovation, at once the product and the customer. If this is the case, I wonder what our half-lives are and when we’re due to expire...