Word: hearing
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...press, world health monitoring agencies, and economists. The worst case about something is often by far and away the least probable case. Implying that the worst case is the probable case tests the public's belief in anything other than what they can see with their own eyes or hear with their own ears...
...table in the d-hall, don’t convene a meeting of your fifty best friends next to me when there are several empty tables all around. When I’m frantically hunched over a computer, I’m probably not indicating a desire to hear about how drunk you got last night. The glares I am shooting you are not my ways of showing my disproval that you so texted him last night when you shouldn’t have. 2. Do not try to compete to show that you have more work than...
...celebrities, but record labels are starting to become the new thing. Ever thought about starting your own label? I have no desire to make money off musicians. I just want to promote them because I want to share music. I love music and I love musicians and when I hear something that's great, I always say it's like you go to a movie and you can't wait to tell your friends about it. Well that's how I feel about musicians and bands. We've all had that experience where we go and see [a concert...
Leopold Engleitner, the world’s oldest-known male concentration camp survivor, recounted the story of his ordeal to a packed Science Center lecture hall on Monday evening. Students and other attendees overflowed into the stairwell and along the back walls to hear Engleithner, a 103-year-old Jehovah’s Witness who was incarcerated by the Nazis for having refused military service. His presentation was conducted in interview format, with questions posed by graduate student Johann Boedecker. Engleithner’s biographer, Bernhard Rammerstorfer, sat alongside the survivor to translate questions into his native Austrian dialect...
...Everett, who also directs The Harvard University Band, with “pushing us to listen across the group and improvise instead of just playing what’s on the page... [H]e has helped to make our music a lot more exciting to play and fun to hear.” Julie A. Duncan ’09, a pianist-turned-trombonist, had never had any experience with playing Dixieland, jazz, or any type of improvisational music before joining The Charles Riverboat Band. “I always refused to join jazz ensembles, because I was terrified...