Word: successã
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...when the senior decided to write about gender issues. Chou originally considered writing about women’s magazines, but given the plethora of studies already done on their objectification of women, she turned to publications aimed at the less-fair sex. Chou chose Maxim because of its unprecedented success??it grew its readership from half a million to two million in 18 months. She calls Maxim “the male Cosmo,” though she says that “Maxim is better for men than Cosmo is for women.” In Chou?...
...much as to induce it to. “Coercion,” thus used, simply refers to any form of action used by one party that aims to make all alternatives to a desired outcome less preferable to the other party. Indeed, the purpose—and the success??of the sit-in was to make it so costly and embarrassing for Harvard to pay its workers poverty wages that it would choose on its own to change its ways...
...Harvard, students strive to balance a full schedule of classes, schoolwork, extracurricular activities, chilling with friends, TV, video games, borderline alcoholism and sleep into a meager 168 hours each week. The majority of students have a bizarre obsession with things like “success?? and being “good at stuff.” The phrase “I have so much free time” is about as rare as a smallpox epidemic. We could endeavor to delve into the psyche of these students, but why bother? Let us just accept that some...
Last Thursday, Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) blasted the administration of President George W. Bush for expanding the war on terror “without at least a clear direction.” The “continued success?? of our military campaign, he argued, “is still somewhat in doubt.” More importantly, Daschle contended, we will have failed in the struggle against terror unless we capture Mullah Omar, Osama bin Laden and “other key leaders of the al Qaeda network.We’re not safe...
...warns that the inability to distinguish among students could lead to a return to a system in which personal connections are necessary for success??harkening back to an earlier elite era of Harvard...