Sentences with phrase «whatever comes tomorrow»

Mini Galerie is proud to announce Whatever Comes Tomorrow, Happened Yesterday, a solo exhibition by the Italian artist Matteo Ceretto Castigliano / CT dedicated to his hometown Turin.
«With President Trump's proposed budget cuts going after the most vulnerable New Yorkers, and his tax bill targeting our economy, it's absolutely critical that New York City prepare today for whatever comes tomorrow.

Not exact matches

It is not merely a question of whether we will use TV, satellite communications, cable and computer, or biofeedback machines — and whatever technology comes tomorrow.
Your body goes hard to work at repairing and adapting to everything you did during your session to make sure you come back stronger tomorrow to handle whatever life throws at you.
Put up whatever you have now and then come back to it tomorrow and edit.
Whatever happens tomorrow, one thing is certain: the seemingly endless stream of Unicorn rumors will finally come to an end.
I think the language of catastrophism, chaos, doom — whatever you like to call it — has actually sobered up, in the UK at least, having peaked about three or four years ago when newspapers such as The Independent ran dramatic front pages on a regular basis, a new umbrella body for activists called Stop Climate Chaos came into existence, Roland Emmerich had the Atlantic Ocean freezing in an instant in The Day After tomorrow, and a leading thinktank lambasted a portion of the British press for indulging in «climate porn».
I predict that winter will be colder than summer, the Sun will come up tomorrow, and you'll continue to be an undistinguished mathematician claiming to be a climate scientist (whatever you're defining that to be at the moment).
So whatever else the Federation envisages as it moves to put legs on the next step of the national mobility scheme, viz coming up with some sort of nationally common approach to Bar admission, it owes it to everyone — to the provincial Law Societies (for whom the Federation is an agent), to the law professors (who are doing their best to prepare students for the profession of tomorrow), to the law deans (who often find themselves being the meat in the middle of the sandwich when it comes to relations between the academy and the profession), to the law students (who don't relish the rules of the game being changed part - way through) and, at the risk of sounding corny, to the rule of law in Canada — to move deliberately, but engagingly.
Thank you for standing with Planned Parenthood and for every person's right to care — today, tomorrow and for whatever comes next.
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