Word: stayed
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What a difference a week makes. From the perspective of the Harvard softball team, however, a more appropriate saying woudd be; the more things change, the more they stay the same...
...work was important enough, both with what they’re doing now and in building up a new group of researchers for the future,” Daar said. “We wanted to provide a platform that they could communicate with their supporters through and stay in touch with other scientists internationally...
...place is nice," says the 24-year-old, visiting for the third time in less than a year. He recommends the park, even though he believes it could use a few more rides. "I was also thinking more Asian-themed exhibits," he adds. "But maybe they're trying to stay away from that...
...current Prime Minister time to reshuffle his Cabinet and survive until July, when the spotlight will be on Japan as it hosts a G-8 summit. That could "slow the erosion of [Fukuda's] support," Curtis says. "That's what he has to do if he's going to stay in office much longer." Says Phil Deans, an international-affairs expert and assistant dean at Temple University in Tokyo: "The more ordinary, normal and boring the Sino-Japanese relationship is, the better it is for everybody." When Fukuda takes on Hu at Ping-Pong, his shot selection had better...
...plan that awarded delegates based on a candidate's proportion of the vote in every state. By doing away with winner-take-all primaries, the new rules prevented a front runner from wrapping up the nomination with a handful of wins in big, delegate-rich states. Underdog candidates could stay alive through the primaries, and perhaps even win the nomination, by collecting delegates in every contest, whether they won it or not. It would be two decades before an underdog turned front runner named Barack Obama would take full advantage of those rules. If Clinton's victories in big states...