Word: listen
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...government concentrator, said he appreciated that Ignatieff attempted to find a balanced view of international relations. “It was very interesting to see that he’s a guy who goes for compromise, that here’s someone that’s really ready to listen to other people,” he said. “It’s good to know that the people who are telling us to run for office are taking their own advice.” Ignatieff sparked controversy in Canada earlier this month after he told The Crimson...
...that their desires were being acknowledged. We reasoned that the Pakistan catastrophe was not receiving exceptional administration attention because those within the Harvard community had not clamored for it. The ERC has proven, however, that with proper insistence and raised awareness, students have the ability to make the administration listen. The ERC has been receiving support from Massachusetts Hall ever since University President Lawrence H. Summers promised to provide funding for any groups working in the earthquake relief effort. While there is no word as to whether the President’s office will match the funds or make...
...video killed the radio star,” as British band The Buggles famously sang in 1979, then online playlists might put the nail in the coffin for FM disk jockeys. “Many music fans are not content to simply listen passively to what radio DJs play,” according to Derek A. Slater ’05-’06, co-author of a report that will be released today by Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society and the Gartner Group, a research firm. Slater wrote...
...declared dead more times than I can count, but it is special and better than most other U.S. companies. If only the rest of them could do as well as Apple. I use my iMac to make movies, access my AppleWorks cookbook, keep track of dates and addresses and listen to music as I recharge my iPod. What's next? Christine Lowe Slater Northbridge, Massachusetts...
...their "economy first" strategy owes much to the intelligence of a Cambridge-educated lawyer who - he admits - was himself "distraught" when his island state found itself independent and alone. Above all, with their horror of chaos, luan, China's leaders have for three decades come to Singapore to listen, to learn, and to admire. Progress coupled with order and limited freedoms has been the maxim of those who have ruled China since Mao Zedong's death; it is a philosophy whose modern origins have their wellsprings in Singapore...