Word: widely
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...added, “We need to take a much more systematic and University-wide look at how Harvard approaches the arts with an eye to redefining both their place and their meaning within the institution...
...rough month. Liberal interest groups are running brutal TV ads that take a page from adopt-a-starving-African-child commercials. Adorable children stare wide-eyed into the camera as a voice-over criticizes President Bush and members of his party for blocking a $35 billion expansion of the popular State Children's Health Insurance Program ("George Bush just vetoed Abby," intones the narrator). And sick kids, it turns out, are just the first salvo: Democrats have lined up an array of heartwarming--and expensive--bills that will be potentially embarrassing for Bush to veto...
Defining exactly what a good-for-you product is--or what the market for these products might be--isn't a science. "You could make the market look as wide or as narrow as you want. The definitions are pretty loose," says Bob Goldin, executive vice president of Technomic, a food-industry research and consulting firm. "'Healthy' is very subjective," says Michelle Barry, senior vice president for consumer trends at the Hartman Group, a health-market consulting and research firm. "Consumers talk about it differently depending on who they are and what they believe." Danone is sensitive to this...
...senior co-captain Adam Hahn said. During the first overtime, the Crimson kept the ball on the Holy Cross’s end, but it could not convert attempts into goals. In the seventh minute of overtime, Akpan took a ground shot from the left but it went just wide. During the second overtime, Holy Cross gained control and had good movement, while Harvard played more on the defensive. One reason the Crimson wasn’t able to find the back of the net was the amount of injuries it sustained during the game. Early in the first half...
...Liberal interest groups have had a field day running brutal TV ads that take a page from adopt-a-starving-child commercials: adorable children stare wide-eyed into the camera as a voice-over criticizes the President and members of his party for blocking the S-CHIP bill ("George Bush just vetoed Abby" intones the narrator). And sick kids, it turns out, are just the opening salvo in a wider appropriations battle. Democrats have lined up an array of heartwarming - and expensive - spending bills that will be potentially embarrassing for Bush to veto...