Word: bandwagoners
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...those who would suddenly hop down off the Harvard bandwagon on the basis of just one unfortunate showing are sorely mistaken in exaggerating the importance of Northeastern’s victory, which was, as far as the standings go, nothing more than a non-conference loss. Obviously such results are to be avoided whenever possible, but each is, when viewed individually, by no means a deal-breaker...
...Duff, sister of Lohan-hater Hilary, was overheard dropping the H-bomb at the Sundance Film Festival, telling friends she’d been accepted at our fair school. Turns out she meant the, cough, extension school. Not to be out-Duffed, Hilary decided to jump on the bandwagon, writing on her e-dairy that she, too, would be "attending" classes on the internet. "The teachers film their lectures then link it to the web and I can watch them teach and take notes from my computer," she gurgled. Yeah...
...restricting access to privileged information. With such an effective system already in place—one that requires an ID number and a privately-held PIN password—it’s a wonder UHS didn’t feel the need to jump on the PIN bandwagon...
...alone in my recommendation. For one, 11 million people have downloaded the browser since its release. And I may very well be the last tech columnist in the world to jump on the Firefox-praise bandwagon (I’ve been using it myself for quite some time, mind you: I’ve just not been proselytizing). Over the past three months as the browser reached maturity and was officially released to the public, noted journalists at the Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and hundreds of other well regarded publications have been singing the praises of Mozilla?...
...problem that this country faces it that the longer it waits to get on the bandwagon, the harder and more costly it will be to do so. The U.S. remains the world’s largest and most powerful economy, but has steadfastly swum against the current under the Bush administration. With declining confidence in the U.S. dollar and the distinct possibility that the world is no longer going to subsidize U.S. spending by buying its government debt, the Bush administration is going to have to find new ways to keep the economy running. Four years of profligate spending seems...