Word: stink
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...world. But up close, the picture begins to crumble. Acid rain and condensation from the former Mughal capital's coke-fueled factories and, environmentalists say, a nearby oil refinery are eating away the marble and turning what remains the color of unloved teeth. The famous canals and watercourses stink. Garbage abounds. And attempts at preservation have proved ineffective, clumsy and lacking in either funds or purpose...
...world. But up close the picture begins to crumble. Acid rain and condensation from the former Mughal capital's coke-fueled factories and, environmentalists say, a nearby oil refinery are eating away the marble and turning what remains the color of unloved teeth. The famous canals and watercourses stink. Garbage abounds. And attempts at preservation have proved ineffectual, clumsy and lacking in either funds or purpose. Common is the visitor who remarks how India's most famous building captures the nation's essence in more ways than...
...would be easy to give up on technology stocks. They're stumbling again, as the likes of Lucent and Nortel pile on bad news. Everyone knows about the glut of cell phones, PCs, chips and fiber-optic line gathering dust. Earnings stink across the board, and stock-market gurus predict we're headed for a demoralizing test of the April lows. In short, gloom is as plentiful as the routers and switches Cisco can't sell. So a lot of investors are hedging their allegiance to technology--and rightfully so. If you want easy odds, take the Lakers to threepeat...
...There was a bit of a stink over what he actually said and how it was reported. It's possible that Powell could have made a verbal slip. On the other hand, at the core of what Powell is saying is common sense - if there's a trust problem between Israelis and Palestinians, there have been some tripartite observation groups involving the CIA, Palestinian Authority and Israelis that have been successful. It's a model that has worked. I think he was looking at a practical solution to a practical problem, of creating independent verification for each side's claims...
...most of that period. It was only under Blair that the party managed to reclaim most of the middle ground issues, leaving the Tories little to campaign on. And the pendulum has swung in the society away from the Thatcherite virtues of individuality and self-reliance. The trains stink and public services are in decline, and Britons are prepared to pay to improve them - not as much as other Europeans, perhaps, but they still want these things to be fixed by government. And the Tories are not well suited to present themselves as the party that will save the National...