Yes, I did.
Jace referred to it as an article.
I bit.
:whatever:
.
A News Article is an article published in a print or Internet news medium such as a newspaper, newsletter, news magazine, or news-oriented website that discusses current or recent news of either general interest (i.e. daily newspapers) or on a specific topic (i.e. political or trade news magazines, club newsletters, or technology news websites). It can contain photographs, accounts, statistics, graphs, recollections, interviews, polls, debates on the topic, etc.
Bitch, Bitch, Bitch, Bitch, bitch......thats all you guys can do these days. If any of you ever made an attempt to get off campus and be social at places other than Squires and Wilkerson you would find no one in sweatpants and more than decent looking women.
wait, youre telling me those girls look good????
baaaahahahhahaha
Screw it...There are a few of us fighting a loosing battle against the "I hate this •hole" contingent.
For all you younger guys and prospectives, it's not nearly as bad as some of these guys make it sound. Yes the winters are cold, and the women do not all look like they're straight out of SoCal. But the place is what you make of it. If you choose to sit at home every night bitch about how terrible it is here and count down the days till graduation then your going to be miserable. Go out and be proactive, join a fraternity or sorority, do something in the community, be a big brother or sister to a local kid, coach a sports team, if none of those are for you then just get involved in something OTHER than aviation. The aero program is great but if you limit your friends exclusively to propheads that "just want to graduate so they can move back to wherever it is that high school was so great they can't wait to live there again" then it's going to be tough to be happy here.
Not pointing fingers at anyone in particular, but just a response to the general discontent and bashing lately.
hey mtts,
both me and jace are older than you, so lose the "young bucks" crap. and we're also involved in a LOT outside aviation. hell, we bash propheads too.
Older than me? I have no clue, I'm 23. Been at UND longer than me? No. (not that that's a good thing)
I wasn't refering to you guys as "young" I was throwing that out there for all of the kids that just got here or are thinking about coming here.
All I'm saying is that four years ago I was sitting around with all of my aviation buddies bashing the same stuff that gets bashed here day in and day out, smells like •, girls are fat, people talk funny, blah blah blah. Well that got old after a semester, so I branched out, joined a few groups made some friends outside of aviation, and all of the sudden this place wasn't nearly as bad. If you can surround yourself with people that are over the fact that there are a few downsides to living here, you might acutally have some fun that doesn't come in the form of seeing who can come up with the latest and greatest fact that makes GF suck.
I realize I'm not going to be changing any opinions, that wasn't the point of the post, just thought someone should play a little devils advocate around here.
and holy #### me and chris_ford find common ground once again! beers for all!:insane:
I thought it was great.
Look at the reaction:
http://nodak.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2213705477&ref=nf
Screw it...There are a few of us fighting a loosing battle against the "I hate this •hole" contingent.
For all you younger guys and prospectives, it's not nearly as bad as some of these guys make it sound. Yes the winters are cold, and the women do not all look like they're straight out of SoCal. But the place is what you make of it. If you choose to sit at home every night bitch about how terrible it is here and count down the days till graduation then your going to be miserable. Go out and be proactive, join a fraternity or sorority, do something in the community, be a big brother or sister to a local kid, coach a sports team, if none of those are for you then just get involved in something OTHER than aviation. The aero program is great but if you limit your friends exclusively to propheads that "just want to graduate so they can move back to wherever it is that high school was so great they can't wait to live there again" then it's going to be tough to be happy here.
Not pointing fingers at anyone in particular, but just a response to the general discontent and bashing lately.
:yeahthat:
College is what you make it, no matter where you go to school.
:yeahthat:
College is what you make it, no matter where you go to school.
Contradicting yourself there Jace. I think you missed the point of the statement "college is what you make of it, no matter....".Very true, but there is a point where all your efforts are limited to how •tty the place is!![]()
It is an article. It's in the newspaper. It's an opinion article.
Wikipedia:A News Article is an article published in a print or Internet news medium such as a newspaper, newsletter, news magazine, or news-oriented website that discusses current or recent news of either general interest (i.e. daily newspapers) or on a specific topic (i.e. political or trade news magazines, club newsletters, or technology news websites). It can contain photographs, accounts, statistics, graphs, recollections, interviews, polls, debates on the topic, etc.
Letter to the editor
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A letter to the editor (sometimes abbreviated LTTE or LTE) is a letter sent to a publication about issues of concern to its readers. Usually, letters are intended for publication.
Usually, letters to the editor are associated with newspapers and newsmagazines. However, they are sometimes sent to other periodicals (such as entertainment and technical magazines), and radio and television stations. In the latter instance, letters are sometimes read on the air (usually, on a news broadcast or on talk radio).
In many publications, letters to the editor may be sent either through conventional mail or electronic mail.
//
Subject matter
The subject matter of letters to the editor vary widely. However, the most common topics include:
Letters to the editor are often used in astroturfing campaigns, to create the illusion of grassroots popular support in the community for a particular cause, candidate, or party.
- Supporting or opposing an editorial stance, or responding to another writer's letter to the editor.
- Commenting on a current issue being debated by a governing body – local, regional or national depending on the publication's circulation. Often, the writer will urge elected officials to make their decision based on his/her viewpoint.
- Remarking on materials (such as a news story) that have appeared in a previous edition. Such letters may either be critical or praiseworthy.
- Correcting a perceived error or misrepresentation.
Conditions
Letters are usually short, as they must sometimes fit in a limited space.
Many newspapers require that letters to the editor be under a certain number of words, and may attach other conditions, such as prohibiting anonymous letters, letters that contain misinformation or are meant to libel someone, are obscene or in poor taste, or are meant to resolve a personal conflict.
Other frequent conditions include limiting writers to one published letter within a specified time period (often, one per 30 days); limiting the publication of letters on controversial topics after a certain time period, especially if the debate takes an emotional toll on the involved parties; and refusal to publish letters that are almost exclusively biblical citations. Some editors will also decline to publish letters that have also been sent to other newspapers, especially competing newspapers.
History
LTEs always have been a feature of American newspapers. Much of the earliest news reports and commentaries published by early-American newspapers were delivered in the form of letters, and by the mid-18th century, LTEs were a dominant carrier of political and social discourse. Many influential essays about the role of government in matters such as personal freedoms and economic development took the form of letters — consider “Cato’s Letters” or “Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania,” which were widely reprinted in early American newspapers. Through the 1800s, LTEs were increasingly centralized near the editorials of newspapers, so that by the turn of the century LTEs had become permanent fixtures of the opinion pages.
Modern LTE forums are not much different from those earlier counterparts. A typical forum will include a half-dozen to a dozen letters (or excerpts from letters). The letters chosen for publication usually are only a sample of the total letters submitted, with larger-circulation publications running a much smaller percentage of submissions and small-circulation publications running nearly all of the relatively few letters they receive. Editors generally read all submissions, but in general most will automatically reject letters that include profanity, libelous statements, personal attacks against individuals or specific organizations, that are unreasonably long (most publications suggest length limits ranging from 200 to 500 words), or that are submitted anonymously.
Tony, you have it all wrong. He's asking about which article to use with sweatpants.
A sweatpants? The sweatpants?
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