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An Afghan boy watches as U.S. soldiers patrol through his village in the Pech Valley of Afghanistan´s Kunar province.
DAVID GUTTENFELDER / Associated Press
An Afghan boy watches as U.S. soldiers patrol through his village in the Pech Valley of Afghanistan's Kunar province.
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Letters to the Editor

Get out

of Afghanistan

It is time to stop the bleeding in Afghanistan ("New term likely for Karzai as foe quits," yesterday).

We increased our forces by more than 100 percent in the past several months, and we are now losing more American lives than ever. The generals want more troops.

Whatever number we send in will surely result in an acceleration of deaths, and we will guarantee our presence there for 10 to 15 more years. We had a fool as president for eight years, and we are suffering the consequences in blood and lost treasure. Let us pray that President Obama does the right thing and gets us out of this quagmire.

J. Creighton

Marlton

fargo99@verizon.net

Where is

common sense?

My wife and I were almost hit by a cyclist at 17th and Chestnut Streets recently ("Bikers and walkers," Saturday).

As we approached the intersection, a cyclist nearly collided with us while riding and talking on his (handheld) cell phone.

As dangerous as cell-phone use may be while driving a car or truck, it is even more dangerous while riding a bicycle in urban traffic, especially on sidewalks.

James Hessinger

Hatboro

jhessinger@verizon.net

City cannot live

on patronage jobs

Judging by Rep. Bob Brady's letter, he is much too pleased with himself ("Sometimes, deals are needed to save livelihoods," Thursday).

There are two types of jobs in Philadelphia. There are those that are controlled by political patronage and unions, and those that are here because the city is a good place to do business.

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Comments   
Posted 06:57 AM, 11/03/2009
drklassen
@Smitreski: You have it backwards---the fall of student-orientation of bookstores is due entirely to schools getting out of the business. Once the bookstore becomes beholden to a CEO and shareholders, its operation becomes all about the bottom-line instead of student service---I've been seeing it happen first-hand. As for textbooks themselves being obsolete, that's half-true. If students were really well served and taught to teach themselves while in high-school, than college classes could simply tell students to "go read up on X and we'll discuss it tomorrow". Until that day comes, though, it is a necessity to have a standardized set of information that professors can know the students have (assuming they actually do the reading). Of course, savvy publishers are starting to create e-books and more on-line media to supplement static written texts. This is what will be the demise of the traditional textbook.
1 comments
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