Word: tends
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...shared with his grandfather was art. The creative DNA has multiplied through his author father and painter mother. "Artists have a sensibility that others don't have," he says. "They have a way of reading into the future." And so, in their own way, do business leaders. They just tend to have less time. Fiat's Fortunes [This article contains charts. Please see hardcopy of magazine...
...audience for your films? They tend to look like me--boys and girls. We're all very sedentary and we like Twinkies. [This article contains a table. Please see hardcopy of magazine.] Woody's Latest Type Scarlett Johansson's roles in Woody Allen's London-set films share striking similarities. And not just in handbags...
...California voted for a $3 billion bond initiative to fund stem-cell research. Advocates from Nancy Reagan to Michael J. Fox have pushed Congress to unleash more money and loosen the rules. Many Republicans as well as Democrats have been receptive, knowing that even socially conservative suburban voters tend to support the promise of research that they think might cure their parents' Alzheimer's or their children's diabetes. It fell to Senate majority leader Bill Frist, once a Bush ally on stem cells and a heart surgeon himself, to break with the President and build a compromise package with...
...Carry-trade alarmists tend to focus on the fact that Japan's "free money" spigot is closing, but rarely mention that rates are likely, for now, to rise by a mere 0.25%. That's not free, but it's still pretty close to it. For the foreseeable future, Japan will remain the world's first stop for low-cost capital. "Even if Japan's rates were to rise to 1%, its differential with other asset classes around the world would still be pretty high," says Macquarie's Jerram. Besides, the BOJ has been signaling its intention to raise rates...
...people who are involved in the admissions process put a significant amount of faith in the process as a trade or an art, rather than a science, because each institution has its own admissions standards,” admissions expert Hawkins says. He notes that while institutions tend to be good at applying their own standards, officers at many institutions bombarded with applications “are not assessing academic information as much as they’re performing triage. They look at the application pool and say this segment seems to clearly not meet it, [while] this meets...