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Word: greedfully (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...iceberg, a single moment that distills the utter douchiness of this school. Harvard is a university where the same resources are available to all of us, where we shouldn’t have to scratch and kick and claw to get what we need. Yet somehow, greed is the pervading ethos of this campus...

Author: By Christopher J. Catizone and Chris Schonberger, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: THE BELL LAP: Day of Depression | 10/19/2005 | See Source »

...some of the factories you have Mexicans there because they will work for less than what the black brother will work for. They're being used to break unions. Corporate America is delighted because that increases the bottom line. It's not the fault of the Mexicans but the greed of corporate America and the need of Mexicans and Latinos to find work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Louis Farrakhan Speaks | 10/14/2005 | See Source »

...case, for the sake of the developing world and its own reputation, Starbucks should donate 75 percent or 100 percent of the profits from Ethos water. If not, consumers should question whether Starbucks has an ethos of charity or an ethos of greed...

Author: By Nicholas F. B. smyth, | Title: An Ethos of Greed? | 9/16/2005 | See Source »

...action. First Novelist H.F. Saint, 46, a Manhattan businessman, clearly knows his financial world and takes it none too seriously. Analysts, brokers, commodities traders are all wickedly caricatured, and in one of the book's most fascinating passages, Halloway's invisibility affords sweet revenge on the market's greed and phoniness. In need of untraceable income, he invents a paper identity complete with a valid Social Security number, opens a brokerage account on imaginary credit, then uses eavesdropped insider information to make himself a millionaire...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Serious Image Problem BEING INVISIBLE | 9/8/2005 | See Source »

Mother Nature behaved as everyone warned one day she would, but human nature never fails to surprise. Stripped of safety and comfort, survivors made their choices: greed, mercy, mischief, gallantry, depravity or a surrender to despair. So nurses hand-pumped the ventilators of dying patients after the generators and then the batteries failed, while outside the hospitals, snipers fired at ambulances, and invading looters with guns demanded that doctors turn over whatever drugs they had. Hijackers shot the tires of fleeing vehicles, slapped the spares on after the owners escaped and drove the cars away themselves. Some police officers battled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Aftermath | 9/4/2005 | See Source »

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