Word: greensboro
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Finally, be willing to listen to what the other person has to say, and keep an open mind regarding his or her feelings and point of view. says J. Scott Hinkle, a family therapist in Greensboro, N.C.: "Tell this individual how much he or she really meant to you when you do get in touch and that you see the other side of the argument." That is what Blanke did. "I told my friend that I understood why she felt the way she did. But we didn't try to analyze it beyond that, and the anger basically dissolved...
...busily concentrating in psychology, dancing with and coordinating children’s programming for the Indian dance troupe Ghungroo, walking, talking, or hastily scribbling notes in class. According to Guttentag, her score on the Glasgow Coma Scale when she first arrived at the hospital in her hometown of Greensboro, N.C. that day in June was four, on a scale of 3-15, where anything above eight carries a good chance of survival. She suffered a traumatic brain injury (TBI) and was in a coma for 16 days and in the hospital for two months. She had to relearn...
...used to be the good Greensboro girl, a goody two-shoes,” she says. “Obviously, I stopped living the perfect life. Now I’m more willing to explore new possibilities rather than just doing what I’ve always done...
Mann continued her exposition of American interracial strife in one of her most recent plays, Greensboro (A Requiem...
Moments of silence have been so widely observed in the wake of Sept. 11—newspapers from the Anchorage Daily News to the Greensboro (N.C.) News & Record recorded area moments of silence on the first anniversary of the attacks—that it is instructive to investigate the origins of the phrase. The first recorded use of “moment of silence,” the Oxford English Dictionary notes, was in 1942, when the American Sociological Review resolved to “express our regret and honor their memory by rising and preserving a moment of silence...