Word: questioningly
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According to a comprehensive study done this year by the Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Australia claimed the highest national per capita rate of adult obesity, overtaking the United States. This begs the question: what has fueled the transformation of skinny, marsupial-enthusiast surfers with great accents into unappealing couch potatoes? My very scientific answer: great television. I can’t help but think that, in a country with more outdoor adventures than even the guy from “Man vs. Wild” can handle, there must be something compelling keeping Aussies indoors and clutching sweaty...
...even make the readers feel as if they have met the playwright himself, although she reminds us that we mustn’t sink to believing myths about the Shakespeare-the-person. The chapter on the “Merchant of Venice” (subtitled “The Question of Intention”) grapples with the problem of Shakespeare’s motive in the representation of Jews via Shylock. Garber seems to bring us increasingly closer to Shakespeare by means of her meticulous analysis of the character’s development over time in productions and in secondary...
...policy makers in the Fed is that interest rates are low but it is clear that our economy is still in trouble,” Motley said. “Their main tool is interest rates. Now that they have done almost all they can with that, the question is what is left...
...Killers once again try to push the boundaries of mainstream music by stretching beyond their already idiosyncratic repertoire of sound. But for a band that’s no stranger to mainstream success and has sold more than 12 million albums worldwide, the question is: why change? Though “Day & Age” rests on the same bone structure of up-tempo dance beats and catchy choruses that made the Killers’ first two albums so successful, it is clear that the group is trying to expand to an even broader audience. Moving beyond their synthesizers...
Responding to the first question of the evening about the decision to run for the UC, presidential candidate Roger G. Waite ‘10 promptly declared his plans to drop out of the race at noon today. Waite, who had previously stated that he would be suspending his campaign to work with University Hall during the financial crisis rather than “on the campaign trail scoring political points,” is one of the two self-proclaimed humorous tickets in the race...