Word: straightforwardly
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...since.“If he goes through the proper channels and gets the proper paperwork and documentation, he will be eligible for the 2006 and 2007 season, so you have to look on the bright side,” Murphy said. “Since this is so straightforward, [the process] is more or less a formality.”The extra year of eligibility means that Mazza will retain his third-year eligibility status next season, making his senior season correspond with that of sophomore quarterback Liam O’Hagan.Over the next two years, the two could...
...idea is straightforward: you connect an adapter to the top of the iPod, cue up a song, and it automatically beams the music to its receiver, which is connected to your sound system. Since it?s not sending audio over FM like those in-car transmitters but rather a 2.4GHz Bluetooth signal, it can maintain a nice full sound at distances up to 30 feet. You can hear a little bit of digital hiss at the high end, but only when you?re nearby-near enough to just plug your iPod directly into your stereo. This...
...Director/screenwriter Atom Egoyan (“The Sweet Hereafter”) deserves credit for shooting “Where The Truth Lies” prettily enough and pacing it well enough that we don’t realize until the credits roll that it was nothing more than a straightforward detective/reporter movie. With that in mind, go ahead and see it for the mystery, see it for the sex, see it for the incredibly cheesy ’70s attire, but don’t expect the truth to lie very far beyond the surface...
...successful run. They dropped the afro-centric opus “Nia” in 2000, followed by their genre-bending breakthrough “Blazing Arrow” in 2002. On “The Craft,” the two have branched out even further, leaving the straightforward hip-hop vibes of earlier work for the marshy turf somewhere between hip-hop, jazz, electronica, and funk, where Outkast’s Andre 3000 has built his secret lab. “The Craft” is laced with swirling atmospheric washes, funkified melodic loops, ethereal crooning, snappy drumlines...
Although I was introduced to jazz at a young age, I never dove headfirst into it. Every few days, I would ask my dad what he was listening to, and he would always reply, “jazz.” Simple, straightforward, I understood it, and I knew what jazz sounded like. Then one day I heard some music coming from his room and asked him, as usual, and he said, “Monk...