Word: approaches
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...capita consumption. The French, No. 2, drink more than six times as much, according to Adams Beverage Group, an industry research group. (Natives of tiny Luxembourg top the list.) MacNeil, 50, who has been writing about wine for 25 years, says the U.S. is still developing its own approach to wine. "We aren't France, with its cafés where you hang out and sip wine. Nor do we like the rather pedantic British approach to wine, with its superior manner of discussing vintages." Instead, she says, Americans are seeking a more casual relationship with wine drinking, something she hopes...
...platoons leave Terrorist Café and proceed down the next dark alley, some dogs begin to howl. The soldiers stiffen and point their gun-mounted flashlights in all directions. "The dogs are the Iraqi early-warning system," alerting insurgents to the approach of strangers, Stubbs says. "They're very effective." Half an hour later, the patrol ends without event. The platoons get back on their humvees and return to their forward operating base, known as Gunslinger. Stubbs is relieved to have completed the mission but can't shake his suspicion--one that is heightened when, a few blocks from the mosque...
It’s no secret that I am in love with the written word. The reason reading and writing can even approach the pleasure of actually interacting with other people is that they’re forms of communication. What makes an article wonderful is that we relate to the people in it—the author, the subject, even the editor. Since FM is all about giving people their 15 minutes of fame as well as allowing journalists to develop a voice, I like to think that we facilitate little moments of interpersonal relationships throughout Harvard every Thursday...
...Kirkland House government concentrator ran for president of the Harvard Republican Club on a platform that promised “to make Republicanism sexy on campus” by advocating a more moderate approach to social issues...
...surprisingly, frustration runs high among international diplomats engaged with the crisis. "We've tried the carrot approach; we've tried the stick approach. And we're getting nowhere," outgoing U.S. ambassador to the U.N. John Danforth, told the international body last Tuesday. "Both sides - the rebels, and the government and the militia - are complicit in this disaster. They sign agreements, which apparently mean nothing at all." For now, no one - neither the government nor the rebels, and least of all Darfur's civilians - believes that the cease-fire can be salvaged. "I think I'll stay here for my year...