Word: heed
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...more than $10 million, and former Dean of the Faculty Henry Rosovsky imposed a six percent across-the-board cut in the operating budget last year. If other Ivy League schools move to a merit-based system and instigate a bidding war for students, Harvard could feel pressure to heed the call to arms...
...attendance numbers decide the financial fate of the tournament, so the tournament directors have decided to heed them. Organizers have kept their recent invitations confined to western squads, hosting Northern Michigan next year and Notre Dame the following year...
Furthermore, as a word of advice from one Arab to another, I feel compelled to caution members of the Society to heed the fate of the PLO--an organization shrouded in miscalculations, now virtually dead and buried. Bader A. EI-Jeaan '95 President, Gulf Arab Alliance
Perhaps the Harvard women's basketball team should take heed of Riley's advice...
Among those paying no heed are the other Democratic candidates, most noisily Iowa Senator Tom Harkin, whose old-time Democratic religion is based on a "soak the rich" populism that may go down well in party primaries but isn't likely to prevail in a general election. In declaring his candidacy last week, Nebraska Senator Bob Kerrey spoke grandly of "investing in our nation, spurring its growth and corralling the deficit." Their reach seemed faintly reminiscent of Ronald Reagan's 1980 vow to lower taxes, boost defense and reduce the deficit -- all at the same time...