Word: shadowers
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...from 1965 to 1975, the growth in the ambitious social programs launched by Johnson accounted for almost 7% of GDP at the time--and that Gore's new spending proposals account for about 1% of current GDP. In other words, Reischauer says, "what Gore wants to do is a shadow of what happened in the 1960s." As the Vice President's team is quick to point out, under Clinton-Gore, government spending as a measure of GDP has fallen to its lowest level since 1966. And even with all Gore's new proposals, his plan promises that by 2008 spending...
...most religious Muslims and Jews--precisely the people who are least likely to believe that there is any worldly solution to the question of who should have sovereignty over God's Mount. It is a question that some of the young mullahs and rabbis who study in the shadow of the Mount sometimes feel is best answered by their God, who will deliver his verdict in blood...
...from 1965 to 1975, the growth in the ambitious social programs launched by Johnson accounted for almost 7% of GDP at the time - and that Gore's new spending proposals account for about 1% of current GDP. In other words, Reischauer says, "what Gore wants to do is a shadow of what happened in the 1960s." As the Vice President's team is quick to point out, under Clinton-Gore, government spending as a measure of GDP has fallen to its lowest level since 1966. And even with all Gore's new proposals, his plan promises that by 2008 spending...
...called Ayers Rock - to its most modern, the Opera House here in Sydney. On the afternoon it was going to arrive at the harbor, I was walking around at Circular Quay. Two Aboriginal homeless people had already taken up positions on a bench. They were sitting in the shadow of this immense ocean liner out of Nassau called the Crystal Harmony, a big boat full of titans with tickets, all of it paid for by IBM. Anyway, these Aboriginals were sitting there, backed by gleaming skyscrapers that are the heart of new Sydney, and the woman asked...
...dawn, Shawn Fanning lay on the brown carpet in the shadow of a converted bar counter, consumed by the idea. He had been awake 60 straight hours writing code on his notebook computer. In his daze, the idea appeared to him as something tangible--a hard, shiny piece of black metal--that he had to forge and form so that it became usable, so that the hard black metal was transformed into a friendly tool, so that the 0s and 1s, the Windows API protocols and Unix server commands, were all somehow buffed and polished and worked to a fine...