In fact, before I came here, I read a story about a young University of Oregon graduate.
Several years ago, I read a survey that indicated financial planning was one of the most popular professions.
This morning I read a trend piece, that staple of New York journalism, in the New York Observer.
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Initially, as research I read a number of books by such writers as Iain Sinclair and Mark Mason.
Recently I read a story about a young Austrian woman working as a United Nations volunteer in war-torn Somalia.
And I read a report recently that I think fairly illustrates this point.
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This morning I read a rather pessimistic-sounding New York Times article.
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But probably not that uncommon these days: I still read some conservative blogs, but I read a lot fewer than I used to.
At the same hour I learned about the SCOTUS decision, I read a report by David Galland about the suffocation of liberty in Europe.
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You know, I read a lot of Michael Pollin, and I am not only Christian, but I am a conservative, and a "crunchy" conservative.
Then tonight I read a fun, true post here on Forbes by Meghan Biro, talking about the importance of diversity in leadership teams.
All because I read a book called You: Staying Young, which advises taking large doses of calcium citrate two or three times a day.
Last year I read a recent interview with the priest of one of the oldest Roman Catholic churches in New York, located downtown and near Wall Street.
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He insisted that I read a newspaper every day, by which, of course, he meant the Times, which in those days was still the august paper of record.
Flying back from a CFO conference last month, I read a Malcolm Gladwell story in the New Yorker magazine about Nathan Myhrvold and a band of merry inventors.
While I was thinking about this tonight, I read a truly insightful, accurate and articulate post by Glenn Llopis, 5 Things Leaders Are Thinking, but Not Talking About.
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Terms like this may lose average users, but brief explanations beside them helped, and I read a References and Citations pop-up menu filled with sources from which the advice was generated.
While enduring an epic flight delay at a New York City airport yesterday, I read a short commentary by the Pulitzer-prize winning author Anna Quindlen about the benefits of backup power generators.
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When I read a Kindle book on my tablet, I often notice how poor the actual content design tends to be, ignoring the rich controls and interactive possibilities that you get in a digital format.
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In keeping with the theory that Mr. Market will do the exact opposite of what the majority expects, I read a recent study that in going back to 1977, there have been 14 bond-market rallies of 10% or more that lasted at least four months.
And I read a report today that the first time it was mentioned - or there was a tiny little mention about it in a Huffington Post story, and it was the exact same day, if not week, that the Sandra Fluke controversy erupted, which of course consumed everybody's attention.
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She is a terrific writer whom I read on a regular basis.
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Over the last couple of years I have read a number of retiring CEOs asked by various newspapers whether they have had any regrets, all that I read said they had no regrets.
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But I have read a thing or two about cultural relativity and I'm pretty sure that we need to chill on the criticism of all things Japanese before we lose sight of ourselves.
You can let me narrow things down by genre or keywords, and you can collect data on how much I read of a first chapter, or how fast I move on to the next blind date, to see just how well I get on with any given book so that you can tailor the next blind date to my evolving preferences.
But as I read through a number of different pieces, I came across an article written by the Rev.
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This is not something I read in a briefing book. (Laughter.) This is not some abstract idea for us.
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One response that I read from a spokesperson from EMI - one of the big four labels - you know, they're acknowledging that DRM creates confusion for consumers.
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