Word: paule
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...SEIU) “have agreed to meet and engage in a constructive dialogue concerning labor relations matters,” surrounding officers at Harvard. Harvard outsources many of its security needs to Allied, which in turn employs between 250 and 300 officers on Harvard’s campuses. Paul R. Kane, an Allied officer at the Design School who said he considers himself a leader amongst workers in the effort to unionize, said “good vibes” had been permeating the workforce since the letter was sent. “This is what we?...
...shoot the movie they're watching. They just want a good story. It is important for the talented people behind the camera to come up with better techniques, but I would strongly suggest that they start a major hunt for some good writers who have new ideas. Harper Paul Williams Alpharetta, Georgia, U.S. Your story seemed to imply that Hollywood's reluctance to accept high-definition video as the standard for image capture is due to nostalgia or a vague notion that film just feels more organic. No digital camera has yet achieved the dynamic range of today's film...
...ORLEANS—One was a lobbyist on Capitol Hill. Another once analyzed policy for the New York City Council. A third helped a candidate win a mayoral race in St. Paul, Minn...
...broadly, there are still major differences on tactics, such as the proposal to censure Bush over his warrantless spying program offered by Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold. That idea won little support among his fellow Democrats. "I don't think it's a lack of ideas; it's coherence," says Paul Begala, the veteran Democratic strategist. The anti-war left is so mad at Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman, for instance, that they're running a primary campaign against...
When President George W. Bush held his first official t?te-?-t?te with then Prime Minister Paul Martin, in the Mexican city of Monterrey in January 2004, he called Martin a "straightforward fellow." Two years later, Bush used the same phrase to describe Stephen Harper at their get-acquainted chat in Canc?n, Mexico. Awkward coincidence? Maybe, but the U.S. President evidently regards straightforwardness as the highest praise he can bestow on his counterparts--at least until he decides it no longer fits the bill...