Word: fibered
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...Hanley’s performance takes Proctor convincingly through all these stages with apt restraint and sufficient fervor. Hanley’s Proctor stands tall among the men of the town, a clear-eyed beacon of sanity and hard-working goodness. Hanley maintains his characters’ moral fiber even as he breaks down and signs his confession...
...whole grains. That is no major failure, according to his plan. It's exactly such permissiveness that made a famous cardiologist into a far more famous nutritionist. We all sensed that the grease in the bunless double cheeseburger was a bit much and that we could use some fiber, but Agatston did the research to make it clear. He wrote a book with a breezy storytelling style and slapped a cheesy title on the cover too. "My waiting room is not exactly filled with South Beach models," he says. He figured out that if he stuck with "modified-carbohydrate diet...
Gibson succeeded because he produced a film from that place within the fiber of his being where his own passions lie. The public responded, providing a lesson for other people of faith. From Gibson we have learned that we should not be afraid, should not run from controversy and should be willing to employ a work ethic and invest the dollars necessary to compete in the marketplace of ideas. --By JERRY B. JENKINS, co-author of the Left Behind series of novels
...acre Dhirubhai Ambani Knowledge City on the outskirts of Bombay is a showcase for India's high-tech sector. There, some 8,000 employees of Reliance Group, the country's largest private conglomerate, operate call centers, monitor the company's fiber-optic network and update data services provided to cell-phone subscribers. Many would not associate the gleaming campus with Reliance, which blossomed under legendary founder Dhirubhai Ambani in traditional industries such as textiles and petrochemicals. But Knowledge City is evidence that a new generation of Ambanis is reinventing India's most powerful business enterprise...
...advance of genocide or to censure the use of weapons of mass destruction (WMD), which is how we would classify the gas chambers at death camps today. Stopping Hitler would have been the right thing to do, but British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain didn't have the moral fiber to do it. Even if he was unaware of the intended genocide, he might have helped prevent a world war. Tony Blair believes he did the right thing in Iraq by removing a dangerous man from power. Saddam Hussein's policies and atrocities may not have had time to seem...