Word: demanding
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...G.L.It?s supply and demand. It?s not going to work that way, it?s simply going to be, the theater?s going to have to do a lot of work and spend a lot of money, they?re going to be competing with day and date, and that?s inevitable. It doesn?t have anything to do with DVDs, it has to do with online. So eventually it?ll all be online, eventually it?ll all just be downloaded into a server, and it will be cheap so that they can compete with-that?s the only...
...don’t think they’re mutually exclusive,” Baek said. “Basically, the administration is supplying a demand that’s been there for the past 35 years. There’s still demand for it, so why not centralize these resources and provide young women—and men—the resources that they’re looking...
...these extreme measures could lead the economy in unmanageable directions that they moved too soon to reduce spending and raise interest rates. That sent the economy into a still deeper deflationary dive. Then the government threw all caution to the wind, and began to spend, spend, spend to create demand. Decision makers held their breath and waited. For an excruciatingly long period of time, nothing positive seemed to happen. Then imperceptibility, in early 2003, the rate of decline began to slow, then to steady, before fragile signs of reversal started to appear...
...strong performer on the stump who has nonetheless been known to misread a crowd sometimes as thoroughly as her husband was known to work one. At a glitzy Kennedy Center event on AIDS last fall, she harangued an audience already deeply engaged with the epidemic with an awkward demand that they do even more. After an almost flawless 2005, when she emerged as the party's most sought-after spokesman, she has seemed to stumble a bit this year. She attracted a little more attention than she intended when she likened the G.O.P.-controlled House of Representatives to a plantation...
...these extreme measures could lead the economy in unmanageable directions that they moved too soon to reduce spending and raise interest rates. That sent the economy into a still deeper deflationary dive. Then the government threw all caution to the wind, and began to spend, spend, spend to create demand. Decision makers held their breath and waited. For an excruciatingly long period of time, nothing positive seemed to happen. Then imperceptibility, in early 2003, the rate of decline began to slow, then to steady, before fragile signs of reversal started to appear...