Word: repeatable
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...critic writing for a conservative publishing house addressing a conservative audience, Bernard Goldberg, a former CBS journalist and the author of the media-bashing memoir Bias, doesn't have to do much to notch a best seller. Step 1: sarcastically criticize the "mainstream media" as hopelessly liberal. Step 2: repeat for 20 or so abbreviated chapters. Goldberg's objections to "mainstream media" coverage of Barack Obama are fairly well worn. Among the many complaints, he notes that Obama's associations with the Rev. Jeremiah Wright and former Weatherman Bill Ayers didn't get enough press scrutiny during last year...
...other anti-U.S. strongmen out there, from North Korea to Iran, with whom Obama believes he should grit his teeth and engage in the interest of U.S. security. To avoid doing in Latin America what he deems sensible in the Middle East and Asia would repeat Washington's careless habit of treating the continent in ways that helped give rise to the Castros and Chávezes in the first place. The best way to disarm Chávez is to give him fewer "imperialist" targets to rail at. As the anti-Bush, Obama has an advantage in that...
...rebounded and dominated Cornell (3-2) 6-1 in the fifth-place match. Up first on Harvard’s schedule was fifth-seeded Dartmouth. Last season, the Crimson ended its 2008 campaign by losing to the Big Green, 4-3, in Hanover. On Friday, history seemed to repeat itself. Despite a tenacious effort, Harvard fell again to Dartmouth, 4-3. The Crimson battled the Big Green in competitive doubles matches. Unfortunately, in the No. 1 and No. 2 positions, Crimson pairs fell, giving Dartmouth the first point of the match. At No. 1, senior Beier Ko and sophomore Agnes...
After a miserable first half performance that saw the Crimson fall behind 32-20 to the Bears, a repeat of Harvard’s poor showing against Yale a night before seemed inevitable. The team shot 30 percent from the field and tallied nine turnovers in that first frame...
...left flank early in his term and soon discovered no one else was following him. Bush clung to his base from the start - and never budged. (Both men were re-elected; Clinton by moving to the middle; Bush by refusing to do so.) I doubt either man would repeat their strategy if they could do it all over again. While there aren't many centrist votes in Congress to build anything around anymore, there are legislative proposals that moderate voters will appreciate...