Word: connects
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...rare for an enterprising undergraduate who enters 27 Kirkland St. Those disoriented College students who wish to study European issues from art history to contemporary geopolitics are often unaware that the Center exists. There is no community through which students in different concentrations but with similar interests can connect with each other. Rather, each stays within her or his own department, studying with the few faculty members there who deal with European economics, political science or history, largely unaware of the opportunities offered by CES, which sits just across the street from Annenberg Hall...
...strong as that of the United States and a multicultural population of 450 million, the EU is an exciting and vital object of study at the beginning of the twenty-first century. Harvard students finally have a wonderful opportunity to examine European issues in a more concerted way, to connect with scholars and politicians, diplomats and businesspeople. In occasion of the fifth year of the Euro currency, Jean-Claude Trichet, president of the European Central Bank, and University President Lawrence H. Summers will be debating the merits and demerits of the European Monetary Union in the Yenching Auditorium on Thursday...
...presidential election, thanks to its having lost more than 250,000 jobs in the past three years. But Bush had dived into his internal Ohio polls, and he reassured LaTourette that the water was fine. "My numbers are great," Bush told the Congressman. "I'm going to connect with those people. I do care about them and their situation." To top it all off, Bush had a surprise in store. That afternoon he would finally nominate someone to fill the new job of manufacturing czar, which he had announced in another Ohio speech six months before...
...North Carolina Senator impressed a lot of Democrats during the primaries with his ability to connect with voters. That could mitigate Kerry's stiffness. But even "tawkin' like thiiis," he has little hope of winning Southern states for Kerry--not even his home state, where he would have faced a tough re-election fight. And Kerry has concerns about Edwards' limited experience in government...
...that has never known what it means to reach a far off destination by passing through every point in between. Mass, rapid, modern transit means a loss of contact with the “in-between-ness” of places. Air travel is great because it lets us connect two distant places by just folding a map. And you’ll notice that if you fold correctly, what disappears into the crease is all the area in between. A’s and B’s on a map are points unconnected by real land but joined...