Word: deepening
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...think that Oxford will just be a chance to deepen the thing that Harvard has gotten me excited about and interested in, so I think that it will be a pretty natural extension in some ways,” Meng said...
...current resurgence of belly dancing, its reputation as a seductive art is played down. Rather, it is promoted as a way for women of all shapes and ages not only to tone their obliques but also to deepen their souls. The success of this message explains why sales of videos by "belly twins" Neena and Veena are soaring and gyms in New York City and Los Angeles are scheduling belly-dancing classes during hours once reserved for Pilates. It's why dance studios from Omaha to Anchorage can't accommodate everyone seeking to enroll...
...that they've become totally amoral. They gave a lot of thought as to how to place their bombs in the theater so as to kill 700 innocent civilians, simply on the grounds that the Russian forces kill a lot of people in Chechnya. And those sentiments may well deepen the ties between Chechen separatists and al-Qaeda. We're not seeing any sign, right now, of the cycle being broken. Those who seized the theater in Moscow may have hoped to get the Russian army out of Chechnya, but they're more likely to have provoked a new offensive...
...book, as well as in roughly the order they would appear on one's table: seasonally. He starts with strawberries - shown in hues from white to the familiar scarlet and the rarer black - and other "aggregate" fruits like raspberries, currants and gooseberries. Next come stone fruits - cherries that deepen in shade from pale orange-red to deep purple; plums in all the primary colors; apricots; peaches; nectarines. He includes pineapples - brought to Europe by Columbus and one of the more popular fruits of the 18th and 19th centuries - as well as grapes, melons and nuts, before ending with pears...
...field. U.S. aid to the region has fallen 10% this year and is slated to drop a further 20% in 2003. The Europeans, meanwhile, are expanding their presence. They have already taken the lead in Macedonia, now the Balkans' most volatile trouble spot, and that role is likely to deepen with the arrival of E.U. peacekeepers in the next six months. E.U. foreign policy chief Javier Solana is the West's most visible face in Skopje, Macedonia's capital. He is also spearheading the current effort to redraw what is left of Yugoslav into a new federation that accommodates...