Word: caters
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...around Harvard Square wish to shop for groceries, their choices are severely limited. There has been no true grocery store in the Square for seven years. It is therefore with relief and growling stomachs that we anticipate the arrival of Market in the Square, a grocery store that will cater specifically to students. Harvard Real Estate Services (HRES) should be commended for intervening in the Square’s pricy commercial real estate market to bring in a business that was badly needed, but that the free market could not provide. The Market’s impending opening...
...issues. All the candidates were able to display their platforms as well as their expertise when discussing solutions for the complex issues—contractors in Iraq, social security, and energy—that the next president will deal with. Oftentimes, it seems that these debates simply cater to popular hype surrounding the candidates for entertainment value. It is understandable that voters get bored by seeing the same candidates say the same things week after week, but dramatizing the debates is not the best way to bring back novelty. When questions from average Americans in the audience elicit more substantial...
That's not a drain the BBC can tolerate. The BBC derives 78.5% of its $8.5billion in income from an annual $275 license fee payable by any household equipped to receive TV. In return, the BBC is obliged to cater to all ages and socioeconomic groups. "In a world of fragmentation, a world of more choice, of a revolution in how people are accessing content, one of our big, big challenges is to hold that reach," Byford says...
...Anthea--I'm Infested or Help, My Dog's as Fat as Me or Freaky Eaters? The latter programs have something in common besides the power of their titles to make BBC executives blush: they were all commissioned by the digital TV channel BBC3. Set up in 2003 to cater to those fickle younger audiences, BBC3 has scored several successes, including the exuberantly tasteless comedy Little Britain. Featuring such popular characters as a pugnacious, latex-clad homosexual named Dafydd Thomas, who has the deluded belief he is "the only gay in the village," Little Britain has won a mass following...
...longer time frames. John D. Cella ’08 said he was encouraged by the willingness of Quinn and Norris to admit that there were mistakes made in the coverage of some financial issues, but added that he was less pleased about how they suggested that articles often cater to popular opinions. “It sort of proved that stories are based on demand,” he said...