Word: disappearings
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...touch with the keys, move over Alicia / I force feed ya the metric scale,” cracks Pusha in the first verse of intro “We Got It For Cheap.” And while the braggadocio doesn’t entirely disappear, it gets stirred up with anxiety. The album is laced with regret, and Malice does his fair share of soul searching, admitting, “And I don’t know how them other niggas built / And I don’t know if ever they feel guilt.” The party...
...about a $49,500 handmade Vividus bed from Sweden? Some luxuries are priceless. A quick poll of peers would probably reveal that most people consider time to be their greatest indulgence, especially in this age of 24/7 mobile communication devices. Others might list dream destinations where they can disappear (and turn off the BlackBerry) for some respite: a bicycle ride through the Versailles gardens in France or a sjour at Thailand's Four Seasons Tented Camp Golden Triangle, where guests learn how to interact with elephants. Paris-based shoe designer Christian Louboutin likes to escape to a house...
...word newspaper is going to disappear. We'll talk about ?news' rather than ?newspapers' because there are going to be so many other ways that people get their news. Newspaper companies are becoming information companies. The definition of news is broadening and the way we're delivering it is changing. The changes have been greatly accelerated by changes in advertising. Advertising has been about 80% of the revenue base of newspapers. As they look for new markets, we have to hold onto those advertisers in all the mediums they need. But we'll continue to have newspapers in print because...
...print-ad revenue has been aggravated by the industry's archaic sales system, which has made it difficult for small businesses to buy space in the nation's 1,200 dailies. Google will help remedy that. But the story won't end there. "The word newspaper is going to disappear," says Scott Bosley, executive director of the American Society of Newspaper Editors. "Newspaper companies will become information companies. We'll do well because we have the best news resources and the most at stake...
Harvard is being a big baby, and has plugged its fingers into its ears, stuck out its tongue, hoping that the world’s military problems will simply disappear, but of course they won’t. Just because the faculty has an irrational hatred towards the military and the students an irrational indifference towards it doesn’t mean that wars—and Iraq, in particular— are simply going to disappear. Irrational because, given America’s position in the world, both are unacceptable options. Iraq cannot be abandoned; it must...