Word: houres
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...After interviewing Gardner for over an hour it essentially boils down to one word: politics. A strong supporter of President George W. Bush, Gardner is sickened by the idea of Kerry as president. ?Anybody but Kerry,? he says. ?I know what a disaster he?d be.? So what brought Gardner out in the open? The answer turns out to be Rush Limbaugh?s talk show...
...wonder if there any way to selectively give a group of students 24-hour access rights. A condition of getting access could be attendance at a meeting where ground rules would be explained—like the importance of not allowing another student to enter behind oneself without showing Harvard ID. Students who self-selected and opted to get 24-hour access could sign a contract which states that they know what is expected of them and that they understand any consequences if they do break the rules. For students who do have a reason to be out from...
...checked Spahr's calculations, he came up with a 1-in-4 probability of a strike. "It was a responsible analysis," says Chapman. "It wasn't mistaken in any obvious way." There was one hitch: the asteroid's projected trajectory was based on only four observations over a one-hour period, hardly enough to be definitive. It would take another look to nail down its path for sure...
...book Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich went undercover to do a series of low-wage jobs on the theory that the best way to write about life at $6 an hour is to live it. If only Ehrenreich had pitched the idea to TLC. Instead, the network produced the more capitalist-friendly job-switch series Now Who's Boss? (Mondays, 10 p.m. E.T.), in which CEOs do drudge work at their own companies, critiqued by their employees. For Tisch, flipping omelets and checking in customers was not just educational but good advertising as well. "We're not as large...
Patients lie down during the procedure, which lasts an hour and is performed once a day, five times a week, for seven weeks. (The cost is about $6,000, compared with as much as $60,000 for bypass surgery.) The pneumatic cuffs are timed to inflate in progression--starting with the section around the calves--when the heart reaches its resting phase between beats. As each cuff inflates, it squeezes blood out of the legs and back to the heart. "It feels like a deep muscle massage," says Dr. Debra Braverman, who administers EECP to patients in Philadelphia. The most...