Feature
Can you hear me now?
Students love cranking their iPods despite risks to hearing
By Jaimie Dalessio
Kaitlin Struble sits in a computer lab surrounded by iPod-clad students. Her classmates listen to music while walking through the quad, checking e-mail, running on the treadmill, waiting for the bus, waiting for class. She's one of them, too. But for a moment she removes her headphones - to make an admission about her generation's iPod toting ways.
Fight classroom boredom with these online games
By AJ Chavar
The nice thing about bringing a laptop to class is it lets you stay organized. It lets you keep digital copies of notes, look up relevant topics online and arguably, and most importantly, it lets you play video games and waste time while your professor or T.
Internet Corner | FunnyOrDie.com
By Andrew Sagarin
"462 million Americans still haven't seen the Landlord. Do you really want to be one of them?" reads a fake advertisement on FunnyOrDie.com. This is, of course, referring to the now-popular comedy sketch in which comedian Will Ferrell meets his landlord, who turns out to be a foul-mouthed, alcoholic two-year-old girl.
From the pages to the screen | Atonement
Oscar favorite "Atonement" successful adaptation of McEwan's novel
By Jen McCaffrey
"Atonement" (Novel) Knopf Books, 2001 384 pages It was just one moment - one lie. But as a result, two people's lives were destroyed forever. And the culprit is forced to carry around the guilt of this one instant for the rest of his or her life. Ian McEwan weaves a tale out of this tragedy in his eighth novel "Atonement.
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