But if you read between the lines, you might make out an opportunist who'd
say anything to survive.
Not exact matches
«
Anything you can do
to reduce the level of injury and stress coming from other sources, the better the chance that the corals are going
to survive,» Eakin
said.
«They'll do
anything it takes
to survive, and so will I,» Vaughn
says.
If you didn't know
anything else about it, you would think they just grabbed some schmuck off the street and stuck him in a pro hockey game and
said, «good luck, man» and he was just trying
to survive it all without dying.
its rubbish that we can
survive or more outrageously as claimed by
said Ozil today, win
anything without these players coming in Don't boast of a 100» 000 war chest and then quibble over pennies for a player we don't at this point know
anything about and as I've stated before may or may not be a great player in the next three or four seasons, (makes you think is beilik an investment for resale
to make more money?)
What a terrifying vision of the future of football we've been served up this week.AC Milan, once the pride of a powerful and thriving seria A now reduced
to shadow boxing against a really not that great United.All because they deserted their natural (and rather beautiful) defensive style of football
to join the circus, brought in foreign players (especially brazilians) who think jogging back
to defend is beneath them and generally put two fingers up
to Italy's historic football traditions.Much good as it done them, and what a boring game?I concede that a lot of football fans nowadays do nt remember
anything before the cheque book league but even they must have been struck by the sheer mind numbing pointlessness of it.Even the stewards were asleep by half time.As for the porto match well all that can be
said is that they made the gooners look like an half decent well balanced football team, no mean achievement when you think about it.At least we, ve had the pleasure of listening
to all those gooners and Mancs waffling on about how great they are which is always hilarious.Especially the stuff about Rooney, just wait till the World Cup when some Italian or South American defender takes him under his wing for half an hour and then see how great he is.If he can
survive the WC without being sent off it will be a miracle.All the recent hype has done him no favours at all.Not that the World Cup really inspires these days, its glory days are long over and it's become a competition decided by referees rather than great play.Bear that in mind if Roons has
to take the walk of shame, it's not his fault, someone told him he was a truly great player like Bobby Charlton or George Best.The problem is he looks like he believes them.
«We
survived the crack, the cocaine, the redlining and now we are not getting
anything for it except telling us
to move,» Muhammad
said.
I don't think this is spoiling
anything when I
say that the title, Lone Survivor, is a bit telling as
to how many will
survive this nightmare.
I agree that «
anything we receive that exceeds what it takes for us
to survive is an overflow of the blessings of God»; in fact, I would take it a step further and
say that every good thing we receive is an overflow of the blessings of God.
I won't wonder until later whether these, the first berries I've tasted in Poland, are
anything like the blueberries my grandfather's second wife — my grandmother — is
said to have
survived on during the war.
CNN just aired a new interview with that upbeat, optimistic centenarian James Lovelock, actually just 88, who
says his usual stuff about it's too late
to do
anything about it, but adds that in his view, 500 million people will
survive the Troubles, or what others have called «The Great Interruption» from 2050
to 3050, by taking refuge in the Arctic Basin, as well as in island nations such as the UK, New Zealand, Tasmania and a few «oases» in North and South America (maybe Colorado Rockies, Banff, Patagonia, Machu Pichu).