Word: snacks
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...connections for future careers, and generate a forum of open debate on gender and its importance in the Harvard community. The social component of the Center is invaluable as well, because even people utterly uninvolved with student organizations would have a place to stop by between classes, grab a snack, and congregate with friends—perhaps, in the process, discovering an event or service that interests them...
CrewBlue was launched on Sept. 17 at CollegeFest, a marketing event in Boston geared toward students. During this event, the student ambassadors received hands-on experience promoting the JetBlue brand to their peers by offering raffles, giveaways, and JetBlue’s signature snack, Terra Blue potato chips...
...been for mobile-phone video. German broadcasters and mobile operators are hoping to have the service in place for the 2006 World Cup, while Nokia plans to sell TV-compatible handsets in commercial volumes by the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The conventional wisdom is that people will "snack" on short snatches of mobile TV and save longer viewing periods for their larger TV sets. All that, however, must still await resolution of some fairly hefty issues. Music downloading didn't take off in a mass way until MP3 compression became an industry standard, and mobile-TV operators must decide among...
...pants and a salmon-colored shirt (no tie), suggesting work and energy; the people here, in shorts and light dresses, look like they're on holiday. Several locals stop by with donations or to pick up on a previous conversation, as the smell of frying vegetable oil from a snack bar wafts by. A young mother, carrying a child, identifies as a Labour voter but she wants to be persuaded to change her vote this time. Key zeroes in on National's tax cuts and a reduction in the high effective marginal tax rates she faces as a part-time...
...must prove that damaging press statements about them are false. The action struck down rules in Pennsylvania and eight other states that had put the burden of proof on media defendants to show the statements were true. The case arose when Maurice Hepps, principal owner of a beverage- and snack-retailing chain, sued the Philadelphia Inquirer for reporting that his chain might be connected with organized crime. For the majority, Justice O'Connor acknowledged that the decision would cause plaintiffs to lose when "evidence is ambiguous," but she concluded that the "Constitution requires us to tip" toward protecting speech. Justice...