Word: bigger
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...last fall, Google rallied all the other major social networks (MySpace, Bebo, Hi5 and so on) and announced a new initiative called OpenSocial. OpenSocial wants to be like Facebook's platform, only much bigger: Widget makers can write applications for it and they can run anywhere - on MySpace, Bebo and Google's own social network, Orkut, which is very big in Brazil...
...think it was time, because it was not really my work because I want to express myself. In work also, I want to change the world, I want to do things. I am very fortunate. If I get bigger, and more and more fans, I want to use that to show people what respect is, and love, and the whole thing...
...wonder that results like these aren't trumpeted these days, but rather carefully explained. Record profit announcements from major energy firms are nothing new; those inflated oil prices have triggered a string of them in recent months. But the slowdown currently underway in the U.K., for instance, "puts a bigger onus on these companies to explain lucidly what exactly that means," says Simon Webley, research director at the Institute of Business Ethics in London, which counts both BP and Shell as supporters. Petrol retailing, for instance, accounts for "very little of their profits," he says, "mainly because of the huge...
...starters in the secondary and moved one of the primary backups there, sophomore Ben Jenkins, to running back this spring. But Harvard still returns junior All-American cornerback Andrew Berry and sophomore corner Derrick Barker, who played as the nickel back all last season.Replacing the safeties is a slightly bigger concern; junior Steve Sheehan, who had 12 tackles in nine games last year, will take over in one spot, while sophomore Collin Zych, who has not recorded a tackle in his college career, will hold down that position.Beyond those two questions, the Crimson appears to be reloaded...
...sunken garden,” manage to keep the attention of a notoriously fidgety demographic. “We just try to focus on making the show kid-friendly,” co-director Alison H. Rich ’09 says. “Everything is bigger and louder and has more ribbons.” Last year’s adaptation of “A Tale of Two Cities” replaced the guillotine with barber’s scissors, echoing the story of Samson and using hair as a symbol of the French aristocracy...