It seems like the world of nutrition is being divided
into armed camps, each proclaiming its superiority and decrying the fatal flaws in all the others.
Let's turn our schools
into armed camps,» Cuomo says.
Nor do I think turning schools
into armed camps is a good idea.
The numerous overlapping sovereign claims to islands, reefs and rocks — many of which disappear under high tide — have turned the waters
into an armed camp.
By early Friday, Watertown had been transformed
into an armed camp, with hundreds of police officers and agents searching house by house, and the Boston area was shut down.
Cairo has been transformed
into an armed camp teeming with enemy agents, and shockingly bold tomb robbers are brazenly desecrating the ancient sites.
Not exact matches
The world from San Francisco to the Ural Mountains seemed permanently divided
into two hostile, ideologically opposed, nuclear -
armed camps, along a fault line defined at the end of World War II.
But different from the wrapping paper drives and the soccer team
camp fundraisers, Girl Scouts is celebrating its 100th year of teaching our young ladies skills and grace that actually do lead them
into young adulthood
armed with some semblance of a higher moral ground and conscience for others and the environment.
She welcomed me
into the
camp with open
arms and taught me the rockwife ropes.
One
camp of researchers claims that using our biological
arms just for walking results in less brain stimulation, while another
camp claims that our backpack
arms have easily been adopted
into the overall body schema — after all, our brains are telling these limbs what to do — so that there's plenty of stimulation.
I'm ready to get back
into boot
camp or the gym so I am loving sprints, presses, lateral and front raises and any other exercise that works the
arms and shoulders.
Some were active members of the
armed forces, having volunteered or been conscripted
into service; others were interned in labor or refugee
camps; more were forced to flee, taking shelter in neutral countries, hiding in mountainous or rural areas, or relocating to New York, as was the case with a number of European artists in exile.