Word: rashly
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...hers. Everyone gets the same information, and she's confident that it's accurate: "They can come after us all they want--it won't change what we're trying to do." What they're trying to do, she says, is prevent a frightened pregnant woman from making a rash decision that she may come to regret. You can talk about choice all you like, she argues, but if a woman feels overwhelmed and all alone and thinks she can somehow "turn back the clock like the pregnancy never happened," then she doesn't understand what abortion really entails...
...Lamp with Locks If you fancy your chances as a hair stylist, but can't find anyone rash enough to volunteer as a model, this hanging lamp is the answer. The brainchild of young Austrian designers Monica Singer and Marie Rahm, the lamp is made from strips of polyester film and comes packaged with a pair of scissors so you can snip it into shape. Just take a little off the sides, please. polkaproducts.com...
...sends troops into battle, then sours on the idea when swaths of society decide that intervention was a mistake? That was the U.S. in 1968, and it's the country Bush could wind up leading if the public decides that comparing Iraq with Vietnam is no longer so rash and ignorant a thing to do as Bush's aides have been insisting it is for the past three years...
...size. While the regulations have existed in various forms for years, enforcement has been lax until recently. Many owners of oversize dogs had previously simply walked their German shepherds and golden retrievers under cover darkness. But a recent crackdown by Beijing police - ostensibly aimed at curbing rabies, a rash of attacks and other canine nuisances - has dog owners fearful that their dogs will be confiscated and possibly mistreated or even put down while in police custody. Police are taking no chances: They have set up special reporting hotlines and even offered rewards for reports of wayward owners...
...Tata group's relationship with its employees changed from the patriarchal to the practical," reads the Tata code of honor, which sets groupwide standards of conduct. Subir Gokarn, chief economist at ratings agency Crisil, says Tata read the runes of change and largely avoided the rash of business failures that followed reform: "He survived the bloodbath. Those who made no changes became extinct...