Word: somehows
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...Britain, has repeatedly urged the Bush Administration to hold direct talks with Iran, warning that there won't be a diplomatic solution unless the two key protagonists discuss their differences. "It's amazing that when we're in a bilateral position, or kind of just negotiating one on one, somehow the world ends up turning the tables on us," President Bush answered on April 10 in answer to a question on why the Administration won't talk to Iran. "And I'm not going to put my country in that position - our country in that position." Needless to say, that...
...period.” This two-week period, arguably one of the greatest selling points of Harvard’s bizarre schedule, is often touted as a beacon of hope for the slacking masses—a chance to catch up on the readings and watch the lectures that somehow slipped through the cracks during the regular part of the semester. And for those rare gems of students who actually completed their readings in a timely fashion and dutifully attended every lecture, reading period is expected to provide the opportunity for comprehensive review. This allows undergrads to truly grasp...
...this point, cramming for exams is second nature. We know how to write essays in our sleep. We have somehow even managed to fit a full class schedule and many hours of extracurricular activity into one week and still do almost a quarter of the reading. You start to fear that you may never be able to do anything as well as you were able to do in school...
...Somehow the PC police haven't yet caught up with this unusual site. At SnakesOnABabe.com, you can play the silly, PG-13 game so simple its directions are only eight words long: Match up the snakes to reveal the babe! Just about as silly, stupid - and strangely fascinating - as the concept of the film itself...
...with the highest rates of use of hospital beds, intensive care units, specialist consultations, and invasive testing don't have the best quality of care and outcomes. In fact, they often have the worst. It would be a great advance in both quality and cost if somehow the American public came to understand that "more care" is not by any means always "better care," and that new technologies and hospital stays can sometime harm more than they help. Patients need to ask more, "Are you sure I need that?" and to trust that, often, the best care is the most...