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Word: two-year-old (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...article also discussed recent activity within the BGLTSA and another campus group, Building On Diversity (BOND). As leaders of these organizations, we were dismayed by the article’s parting shot: a two-year-old, decontextualized, and inflammatory quotation from a graduate of the College. By ending the article on this negative note, The Crimson implies a persistently acrimonious relationship between the BGLTSA and BOND which simply does not exist. The period of discord to which the quotation alludes took place years ago, while most members of our respective organizations were still in high school. It is neither reasonable...

Author: By Justin C. Ocean, Marcel A. Q. laflamme, and Zachary M. Subin, S | Title: Tension Between BOND and BGLTSA Spurious | 10/21/2002 | See Source »

...would not want my two-year-old son to look back and say, ‘what were we thinking?,’” Pugliese said...

Author: By Lauren R. Dorgan, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Watertown, Harvard Reach Historic Deal | 9/25/2002 | See Source »

Advent Networks Inc., a two-year-old Austin, Texas, maker of broadband equipment for cable operators, hit pay dirt in May when it signed Mitsubishi to be its distributor in Japan. Already the Asian trading titan has got an order to sell $5 million worth of Advent's equipment to Tokai Group's AIC Cable Network, Japan's fourth largest cable operator, over the next two years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Exporting to Survive | 9/23/2002 | See Source »

Vividon, a two-year-old start-up based in Sudbury, Mass., took a similar approach to selling its devices, which transmit streaming audio and video signals over cable-TV systems and the Internet. It made its first big sale last December to Samsung, the Korean electronics giant. Vividon was then able to land sales in the U.S. But it still garners a third of its annual revenues, which are approaching $5 million, from Korea, Japan and China. "The classic way of building a start-up is to cultivate business Stateside first, then expand overseas," says CEO David Ellenberger. "But with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Exporting to Survive | 9/23/2002 | See Source »

...cunning brood, who in selling Seagram to Messier managed the equivalent of selling a Mercedes for $100,000 and, if all goes well, buying it back two years later for $20,000. An $80,000 profit, and they still have the car - all tuned up, to boot. Bravo, wise guys. • That I should not admire wise guys; they're ruining the planet. • That my two-year-old son's ability to assemble complex structures with his Lego doesn't qualify him as a captain of industry. • That there is poetry in small shareholders. At Vivendi's April...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Man Who Fell to Earth | 7/7/2002 | See Source »

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