Word: react
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...part in the protests, and I wanted classes to start again, so I was grieved to see how the media lumped students together with destructive demonstrators. Necessary reforms may be forestalled again if French officials let a minority of students and unionists decide the fate of legislation. Today people react to policy changes with sensational demonstrations, and politicians bow to the pressure for fear of losing in the next elections. Pauline Gastaldi Nice, France Thank you for your very friendly and optimistic cover reporting on the French government's efforts at reform in the face of citizen resistance. Unfortunately...
Koné, 36, has built Airness around his own early street-level observation that kids determine what's hip, not the companies hawking togs to them. "By observing what people were buying or looking for, I could react faster to current trends and demand--and anticipate what would work next," he says...
...place where you can deal with them, because there's no running away from them in this business." Asked if he worried that public scrapes could hurt his political future, Kennedy said "there's no mortal blows there. It's really a question of how I respond - whether I react, or respond... I'm still in this lifetime journey of living and learning, but I think I have been around back home enough for people to take a full view of me and not have me isolated to a few negative headlines or sensational reporting...
...radical of the street protestors have said that they will be happy with nothing less than the King's exit from the country; adding to the uncertainty is how the Maoist guerillas, who control large parts of the country and whose influence has steadily grown during the crisis, will react...
...editors: In her comment on Christianity at Harvard (“Goodness Gracious,” Apr. 17), Ms. Caldwell identifies a phenomenon that should not be seen as a problem. Bemoaning what she sees as an insufficient level of anger on the part of Christian students reacting to the Owl Club’s “Catholic Schoolgirl Party,” she points out that “most of Harvard’s Christians turned the other cheek despite the offensive nature of such an event.” While Ms. Caldwell longingly observes that...