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(04/22/13 2:44am)
“Biases in the media are unavoidable,” writes Russell Bogue in a well-written and
insightful column, “Picking and choosing” (April 17). His article appropriates a now national
debate critiquing coverage of the Kermit Gosnell trial.
(04/15/13 12:56am)
Imagine watching a movie in fast-forward. No pausing, no rewinding, no slowing
allowed. This is how you now must live. You must absorb all information in half the time and
respond to it likewise. Think fast, act now, or get left behind.
(04/09/13 12:23am)
What if I offered you the choice between a wage with an annual 50 percent raise and a wage with a 25 percent one? Which would you like? The first? Great, me too.
(04/02/13 3:19am)
Writing a science article is a bit like coaxing a 5-year-old into eating foie gras. Upon seeing the plate, the kid will become suspicious. He will complain about the color, poke the spongy texture and make a few skeptical faces. He must be spoon-fed the first couple of bites. If he likes it, you’re lucky. More often, you simply realize a 5-year-old won’t eat foie gras and maybe jumping straight from chicken nuggets to duck livers wasn’t the best idea.
(03/25/13 2:31am)
Like plant stems eagerly soaking up water, we absorb their wisdom every day. Like young children to their mothers, we listen with rapt — or not so rapt — attention to the lectures that may determine our futures. Like online shoppers looking for the best bargains, we prowl rating websites for the brightest, the funniest, the most life-changing.
(03/18/13 4:22am)
Informed retraction. Wait, I’m not talking about the honor system. Surprised? I know; it’s a phrase you’re tired of hearing. So, let’s turn the tables.
(03/04/13 4:37am)
How many times have you found yourself stuck in the class-transition time crowd, moving slower than students leaving the Corner at 2 a.m. on a Friday? Have you ever, in that moment, looked up toward the sky, your destination tantalizingly in sight, and felt that distinct desire for the ability to fly? All that unoccupied space right above you — and no way whatsoever to use it. Frustrating, isn’t it?