单词:Amherst, Jeffrey
单词:Amherst, Jeffrey 相关文章
JEFFREY BROWN:A still tentative American economy looked online today, as digital deals were to be had, and holiday shoppers lit up Web sites. Retailers had high hopes that Cyber Monday sales would add to what's been a strong start so far. If all goes
[00:00.00]Speaking: [00:02.01]Exercise 1 Listen to the telephone conversation [00:05.74]between the manager of Fitness Products [00:07.86]and the customer.Answer these questions: [00:13.77]Good morning. Fitness Products Ltd. [00:15.71]Can I help you?
[00:00.00]Well, I can assure you personally [00:02.95]that you will receive a full refund, [00:05.01]if you can give us the current guarantee. [00:07.47]I'd like that in writing, please. [00:09.29]Certainly, Mr Jeffreys. [00:10.72]And we will look in
BBC Learning English Weekender Soldier Jackie:Hello, welcome to the programme. Im Jackie Dalton. Today, we take a look at some job related language with the help of Jeffrey, whos going to tell us about his work. What does he do? Jeffrey Im Captain J
LULU GARCIA-NAVARRO, HOST: Jeffrey Eugenides is well-known for his novels. He won the Pulitzer for Middlesex. But his latest work, a collection of short stories, is a departure. JEFFREY EUGENIDES: Short stories are difficult, maddening, little puzzle
AILSA CHANG, HOST: At some of our nation's top universities, more and more students are coming from an unlikely place - community college. That's because many Ivy League and other elite schools are accepting more transfer students. This is unusual be
JUDY WOODRUFF: Now: how life after college can be influenced by choices made before students even enroll, and why it can matter for their financial futures. It's part of our weekly education segment, Making the Grade. William Brangham has our convers
JUDY WOODRUFF: Finally tonight, the first in a new series we will be bring you over the coming months. We're calling this project Where Poetry Lives. Jeffrey Brown tells us about it. JEFFREY BROWN: We have a special guide traveling with us, poet laur
GWEN IFILL: Now adoption in America in the age of the Web. A new series of investigative reports published this week is raising serious questions about how some adoptive parents who seek help online are encountering unintended consequences. Jeffrey B
JEFFREY BROWN:Yes, taxes are due on Monday. And, yes, once again, tax reform is in the air. It's been more than a quarter-century since the last overhaul, and now President Obama and key leaders in both parties say they'd like to work on simplifying
JEFFREY BROWN:Whither the economy? That's been the question for quite a while now. Today, there was a surprising and perhaps confusing new twist. The Commerce Department reported that gross domestic product actually shrank in the last quarter of 2012
HARI SREENIVASAN: Next: a pair of dispatches from Detroit at an important moment, starting with a key trial over the city's bankruptcy filing. Detroit's leaders say the city is $18 billion in debt, forcing a move to Chapter 9. But they also must pers
GWEN IFILL: Today marks 50 years since the United States declared a war on poverty, but victory has not yet been declared. Kwame Holman has the backstory. KWAME HOLMAN: When President Lyndon Johnson took the stage for his first State of the Union add
JEFFREY BROWN:And we begin an occasional series about the way we live ever more of our lives online in the digital age, and some of the risks and rewards connected with this evolution. In coming segments, we will discuss the connections and disconnec
JUDY WOODRUFF: New HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths have fallen so dramatically in recent years that it may be possible to control the epidemic by 2030 and eventually end it altogether. That's the projection in a new U.N. report released in adv
JUDY WOODRUFF: Now: terror and renewal in West Africa. Just days ago: Boko Haram pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, raising fears the militants' insurgency in Nigeria could become part of an international conflict. This weekend saw a burs
SCOTT SIMON, HOST: Jeffrey Tambor is a star at an age which a lot of other stars have already burned out. He's been a professional working actor since the early '70s. He's done Shakespeare and Avis commercials, Hollywood Squares and La Cage Aux Folle
JUDY WOODRUFF: When it comes to the battle against the Islamic State, much of the world's attention is focused, of course, on the murders and the mayhem it has wrought. But there have also been a series of attacks on antiquities and cultural heritage
JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, as we mentioned earlier, there's been a passionate reaction to Jim Fallows' piece. And joining me now to discuss it is former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey. You heard Margaret mention him. He's a former Army infantry offi
GWEN IFILL: One last zinger, one last laugh, one last bow. Jon Stewart takes his leave of The Daily Show tonight. Jeffrey Brown has our look. JON STEWART, Host, The Daily Show With Jon Stewart: Whose team are we on in the Middle East? JEFFREY BROWN: