Word: writting
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...much-because of international competition and changes in the composition of the work force-that the old relationships no longer hold? We have insufficient data to quantify that possibility, reply the defenders of the conventional view. In other words, the assumption that the future will be the past writ larger has now been programmed into the computers, and only an earthquake can dislodge it. God help...
...Public behavior is merely private character writ large...
Whether that reasoning will pass muster down the line remains to be seen, since Trek fans are notoriously alert to any noncanonical deviations from Roddenberry's holy writ. "The laws of Star Trek are totally fictional but are held by the fans with such reverence that they have to be followed as if they were Newton's," says Berman. "You have to treat them very carefully, because there are people who for 25 years have considered them sacred." Even so, there are times he contemplates heresy: on his desk sits a bust of Roddenberry, its eyes and ears covered...
That's a word you don't hear much on campaign trails lately. Everywhere across the political map, this is the year of fear and loathing. Voters fear the future, which looks to them like the present writ large: more concern about crime, more economic pressure on their families, more of that unnerving sound of something eating away at the edges of their lives. What they loathe is Washington, which is doing too much or not doing enough, and either way doing it badly. In this roiling situation, Gingrich, 51, may emerge as Washington's most influential Republican...
...Kennedy-Romney match-up has all the elements of an Oedipal drama--Clinton-Bush redux, only writ small and with party affiliation reversed...