Word: paces
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...were getting their PhDs at Stanford, in 1997. They will still own about a third of the corporation and there will be two tiers of stock so that not all votes are created equal. That said, their engineer-centric company will be under extraordinary pressure to grow at a pace that can warrant its sky-high valuation, and any missteps, such as its recent release of G-mail, which rankled privacy zealots, will probably not be greeted joyfully on Wall Street...
Although Harvard’s fee is currently $35, my predecessor’s administration set the council budget at $47 per student as it attempted to keep pace with demand by spending past rollover. The reality is that while the campus has become accustomed to consuming council grants, events, and services at $47 per student, the next fiscal budget will have to return to the $35 per student level, meaning smaller grants and fewer events and services. This decline would be less serious if the reality were not that other top campuses are already easily spending a few times...
...Middle-of-Nowhere, N.Y.). But it can’t be too much to expect of Harvard to increase the library budget by what would amount to 0.00226% of next year’s interest on the endowment—assuming it continues to grow at last years pace of 12.5 percent and the cost to Harvard is the same as Cornell’s (two perhaps oversimplistic, but illustrative, assumptions...
...second and final round of the two-day event, Klein couldn’t quite keep up the pace, but still managed to shoot a solid four over...
...Another part has been tactical, intentional: Kerry's recent priorities have been fund raising (he brought in $13 million last week alone) and taking time to develop a careful strategy for the general-election campaign. "We're not going to allow George Bush or the press to dictate the pace of our campaign," an aide said. An advertising blitz will begin next week, and a series of substantive speeches has been launched. The last was on fiscal responsibility; the next will be about the "jobs and the industries of the future." But I suspect there's another reason for Kerry...