Word: smartly
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...shaking effect), and a mobster get stabbed in the eye with a shattered light bulb. On Monday night, in a particularly laughable scene, we found out from his psychiatrist that the show’s hero Michael Scofield (Wentworth Miller) is, through a jumble of expert technical terms, very smart and empathetic. Scofield, you see, intentionally landed himself in the big house in order to hatch an intricate plan to spring his wrongfully-convicted brother before said brother’s scheduled execution. You’re a genius, doc! But then, in the midst of all the unintentional comedy...
...degree to run facebook.com, the second largest online social networking site and the 10th most-trafficked site on the Internet, according to Hughes. Zuckerberg spent the morning meeting with computer science professors for help recruiting engineers straight out of college. “The professors can identify who the smart students are,” he said, adding that he would prefer to hire younger engineers rather than programming veterans. “The job lends itself to people with raw intelligence rather than industry experience. And if you’re coming out of college, you have a really...
BILL: Well, they're both a huge responsibility but also very enjoyable. It's working with smart people, taking on long-term challenges that have been daunting. Every breakthrough is so exciting, so I love that, whether it's great software, a great new drug or a great way of getting drugs delivered...
...edgier Owen Wilson and Ben Stiller. "I knew Tom Hanks. We were starting in comedies around the same time," he says, sipping his tea at the bar at the Hotel Bel-Air and recalling his mid-'80s roles in Top Secret! and Real Genius. "Tom Hanks was very smart. He made several of the same kind of films in a row. Sweet films: Big, Sleepless in Seattle. So you thought of him as a product. I'd be very happy to do a bunch of comedies in a row. Sean Penn, Nic Cage, Johnny Depp have very established identities...
...years, arguing that the group’s leadership did not adequately represent its members. He took the Harvard chapter with him and went on to found the independent HUSPMGU in 1996, when he received official certification from the National Labor Relations Board. “He was smart, I can tell you that. And he was a good organizer, I can tell you that,” said Tom Biggie, a fellow security guard who came to know McCombe in 1990 through the union. The labor movement at Harvard gained steam in the early 1990s, when the HUSPMGU confronted...