It did not occur for French people confronted with Israeli faces or Israelis confronted with French faces.
|
|
The face-name effect occurred for French people confronted with French faces, as well as for Israelis confronted with Israeli faces.
|
|
For a few hours, we're confronted with different, difficult lives.
|
|
Confronted with his bankruptcies, he reacted with pride, not shame.
|
|
But when confronted with documents, he began to open up.
|
|
What do you do when you're confronted with that fact?
|
|
When confronted with a question about decriminalizing illegal immigration, Sen.
|
|
The accused have been confronted with a range of consequences.
|
|
What do you do when confronted with all of this?
|
|
For one thing, consumers are typically confronted with steeper prices.
|
|
"I was confronted with having to cook eggplant," he said.
|
|
The problem reappears when confronted with Pharah, Overwatch's Egyptian hero.
|
|
Confronted with her at the MFA, she looks utterly contemporary.
|
|
And they are often confronted with the same subjective biases.
|
|
Nothing really mattered after being confronted with life and death.
|
|
We never bow, we never break, when confronted with crisis.
|
|
He is confronted with remembering various aspects of his life.
|
|
Confronted with them in the flesh, what would they do?
|
|
Yet when confronted with this test, even they failed it.
|
|
Young people need to be confronted with discomfort, Crumpler said.
|
|
Lebanon, Jordan, and Turkey are confronted with unprecedented humanitarian crises.
|
|
But, when confronted with this example, can you blame him?
|
|
It's demoralizing to be confronted with such criticism and aggressions.
|
|
Once confronted with the information, he recanted his earlier claim.
|
|
And when confronted with that fact, he makes up excuses.
|
|
" When confronted with the statement, he responded: "I didn't say that.
|
|
Confronted with his costar's confession, Gooding, 48, didn't plead the fifth.
|
|
Every now and then, you'll be confronted with a difficult person.
|
|
A strange Facebook problem has seen users confronted with the past.
|
|
The separatist project foundered last autumn when confronted with harsh reality.
|
|
"Nobody wants to be confronted with hateful content online," he said.
|
|
Well, people are confronted with something they couldn't have imagined before.
|
|
Their laboratory of democracy would be confronted with several immediate experiments.
|
|
What did the opposing teams think when confronted with this ridiculousness?
|
|
Confronted with forbidden fruit, you know she'd take an audacious bite.
|
|
Confronted with Ms. Warren's opposition, President Obama did an end run.
|
|
Until director James Gunn, confronted with this evidence, set us straight.
|
|
But in "Nutshell" we are confronted with an over-reliable narrator.
|
|
What does a sci-fi superhero do when confronted with therapy?
|
|
In the meantime, Claire is confronted with her mother's fading health.
|
|
How do the nightclub owners react, when confronted with your exposé?
|
|
You get in the game, you're confronted with problems right there.
|
|
But confronted with these numbers, House and Senate Republicans seemed unfazed.
|
|
Now Mr. Trump is confronted with the consequences of his decision.
|
|
All surfers are confronted with this each time we paddle out.
|
|
When confronted with criticism, he lashes out like an intemperate child.
|
|
"Oh, my God," she thought when confronted with the horrifying image.
|
|
Confronted with the claims, Mr. Cain initially did not deny them.
|
|
It needs to be confronted, with great firmness and creative diplomacy.
|
|
When she's confronted with a sudden loss, she feels utterly alone.
|
|
Confronted with these dilemmas, oil companies are taking quite different approaches.
|
|
"Mr Cameron was confronted with an open goal," the Times editorialised.
|
|
"That's one characterization," Ms. Conway said when confronted with those circumstances.
|
|
I was confronted with it recently, at a really wonderful theater.
|
|
Still, after being confronted with this issue, we had no choice.
|
|
Confronted with true, clear facts, there is almost never an acknowledgment.
|
|
We are confronted with the never-ending task of bearing witness.
|
|
"Some people have never been confronted with death before," he explained.
|
|
Mrs May could therefore soon find herself confronted with a leadership challenge.
|
|
Even when confronted with reality, they have a problem processing the truth.
|
|
But will the other Starks be so unemotional when confronted with Jaime?
|
|
Three exploding ants exhibiting exploding behavior when confronted with a weaver ant.
|
|
Team manager Won-il sighs when confronted with this sort of criticism.
|
|
Now senior citizens, the women are confronted with new set of challenges.
|
|
I wanted audiences to be confronted with a woman fully naked—me!
|
|
The next president is going to be confronted with an unforeseen challenge.
|
|
After years of outsized success, the company is confronted with a crisis.
|
|
In a 1993 interview with Oprah, Jackson was confronted with that notion.
|
|
"We're all confronted with tragedy, or extreme sadness and loss," he says.
|
|
I want to talk about Mary being confronted with yet another blackmailer.
|
|
When confronted with his disastrous actions, Filitt reacts like an insecure bully.
|
|
Confronted with that threat, politicians are going to do what politicians do.
|
|
But Trump may be confronted with questions about domestic issues as well.
|
|
As a business owner, I'm confronted with vandalism and theft every day….
|
|
There he was soon confronted with Jews fleeing from German-occupied Poland.
|
|
When confronted with the prospect of jail time, he decided to cooperate.
|
|
When confronted with opposite and belligerent populism from abroad, homegrown populism expands.
|
|
In April, the president suddenly was confronted with a second legal front.
|
|
What is the Trump team doing when confronted with this similar threat?
|
|
When confronted with their raw curiosity and assertive arguments, I would bristle.
|
|
Pilgrims walking to Karbala this past weekend were confronted with both narratives.
|
|
Confronted with the liberal strategy, conservatives must respond with action and resolve.
|
|
Platform companies say they're neutral, especially when confronted with bias from regulators.
|
|
The world has already been confronted with two major flashpoints this year.
|
|
"They don't have any sense of what we're confronted with," she said.
|
|
"The President did nothing wrong," Sanders repeated when confronted with the stories.
|
|
When confronted with the details of the relationship, Clinton lied about it.
|
|
Who could not smile when confronted with this heart-expanding, crazy beauty?
|
|
We are constantly confronted with enemy figures, keeping with 'panem et circenses.
|
|
Confronted with this power grab, every lawmaker should be bellowing in alarm.
|
|
Traditionally though, it does poorly when confronted with smaller amounts of data.
|
|
When Clinton was confronted with all of this, he got very, very defensive.
|
|
The EU has been confronted with other eurosceptic governments in Greece and Hungary.
|
|
Nevertheless, it's oddly satisfying to see Reynolds confronted with the gendered double standard.
|
|
Confronted with an IP lawsuit from the latter firm, Ninebot simply bought Segway.
|
|
When you're confronted with evil, you don't shake its hand or applaud it.
|
|
Mandell was recently confronted with over-the-line PDA while on her honeymoon.
|
|
We'd be confronted with something as cryptic and nonsensical as it was enlightening.
|
|
Beyond these steps, Najla was confronted with a final hurdle: obtaining a visa.
|
|
" Apple counsel Boutrous told CNBC: "The government is often confronted with competing interests.
|
|
Yet, even when confronted with this reality, some have chosen to bury it.
|
|
They could not fight back when confronted with corroborating evidence and multiple accusers.
|
|
When particles reach the detector, they're confronted with a bath of liquid xenon.
|
|
Ryan was confronted with the evidence, and banned from the Discord for lying.
|
|
When confronted with the allegations, Sanders said he didn't know of the complaints.
|
|
When confronted with heavy traffic or unexpected situations, driverless cars just sit there.
|
|
Confronted with the subsequent outrage, the police started an investigation into the leak.
|
|
Jay Inslee, Washington Inslee was the first governor to be confronted with coronavirus.
|
|
Confronted with these competing convictions, the Greens seem to have no good answer.
|
|
And there I am confronted with a large case full of specimen jars.
|
|
I open the dressing room door and am confronted with a paper chair.
|
|
When actually confronted with non-believers, he had no answers for their questions.
|
|
Confronted with the incomprehensibility of death, the mind seems driven to construct metaphors.
|
|
When confronted with the facts, Trump said he had "the world's greatest memory."
|
|
We are confronted with a world right now which needs to find its balance.
|
|
Our children are confronted with enough harmful and explicit content in today's entertainment media.
|
|
But we never think of clothes that way when we're confronted with something new.
|
|
The new president will be confronted with urgent and excruciating choices between unpalatable options.
|
|
However neither had ever been confronted with the sight of a dead, decaying elephant.
|
|
Starting just hours after her birth we were confronted with costs we didn't anticipate.
|
|
Now, what does a mother do when confronted with her daughter's newfound stripping career?
|
|
But humans, confronted with superpowered non-white people, react with predictable hysteria and racism.
|
|
It successfully exploits the viewer's own bias to feel scared when confronted with difference.
|
|
Confronted with the prospect of President Donald Trump, liberals hit the books for inspiration.
|
|
But eventually, whoever assumes office will be confronted with the current state of NASA.
|
|
Clinton made the right, if unorthodox, choices when confronted with a narrowing political funnel.
|
|
In Puerto Rico, he was confronted with the immutable fact of a devastating hurricane.
|
|
Confronted with the documents, Martin admitted he had taken the documents home without authorization.
|
|
On National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, we are confronted with an unacceptable disparity.
|
|
The allergy puzzle In 1987, Dr Sheryl van Nunen was confronted with a puzzle.
|
|
Confronted with the findings, Bannon acknowledged he was taking legal advice on the matter.
|
|
Confronted with this fact, Mr. Talese briefly disowned his book before changing his mind.
|
|
The question is worth contemplating, because we're confronted with it fairly regularly in life.
|
|
On Sunday, Rio Olympics officials were confronted with the most high-profile crime yet.
|
|
Pain is painful, in particular for policymakers confronted with tough decisions and difficult compromises.
|
|
Historically, when confronted with teacher shortages, requirements to become a licensed teacher are lowered.
|
|
Literally confronted with the awe-inspiring reality of mortality, Fabia found solace in meditation.
|
|
I think that's an issue we're not the only ones to be confronted with.
|
|
You're also confronted with The Algorithm, which surfaces popular player-created works in Dreams.
|
|
When people are confronted with imagery, it finally helps them overcome biases and prejudices.
|
|
" When confronted with "those little questions that people ask, understandably, 'Are you seeing anyone?
|
|
As my career progressed, I was confronted with more poor treatment by my superiors.
|
|
"Once confronted with photographic evidence, he confessed to having an ongoing affair," she continued.
|
|
"Journalists were confronted with the spectacle of an issues-free campaign," Tyndall told me.
|
|
Such people, confronted with a collective problem, reach naturally for cooperative, mutually beneficial solutions.
|
|
Confronted with these new realities, many producers of age-worthy wines changed their thinking.
|
|
Is it better to shout loudly or to laugh uproariously when confronted with them?
|
|
Namely, a decrease in cognitive control when we are confronted with society's many stereotypes.
|
|
When you see the immigration system up close, you're confronted with its bottomless unfairness.
|
|
I don't know what their initial assessment was of what they were confronted with.
|
|
Government spokesmen, confronted with a crisis, basically responded by asserting that everything was fine.
|
|
If you're among the doubly disadvantaged, you're basically confronted with an entirely alien world.
|
|
Kim, confronted with a serious personal crisis, does something that's frankly unbelievable and baffling.
|
|
A normal human being, confronted with the trolley problem, will ask questions about context.
|
|
When first confronted with the allegations, Sanders said he didn't know of the complaints.
|
|
Mike Pence did his incredulous headshake when confronted with Donald Trump's insulting rhetoric (Mexicans are "rapists"; women are "pigs") and when confronted with Trump's policy ideas (NATO is "obsolete"; it's fine if the Saudis get nukes; women should be punished for having abortions).
|
|
Confronted with the glacial pace of achieving gender equality, other nations have turned to quotas.
|
|
But Trump himself almost always insists he was serious whenever confronted with those questions directly.
|
|
Most 3-year-olds would be at loss when confronted with just one Siberian Husky.
|
|
Much like Trump, when confronted with his statements, Duterte's office insists that he was joking.
|
|
Between each turn you're confronted with newspaper headlines that follow the basic track of history.
|
|
Visitors disembarking from the ferry were recently confronted with some unusual messages from the rangers.
|
|
We tend to lose sight of the human element when confronted with such enormous tragedy.
|
|
It's always sad when you're confronted with the fact that you'll always outlive your pets.
|
|
Put [on] trial for that, he is confronted with the decisions he's made in war.
|
|
Once again, we are confronted with the question: How were we even alive before texting?
|
|
Over the past few weeks Mrs May has been confronted with one disaster after another.
|
|
Confronted with the court records by aides last week, Parnell did not deny the allegations.
|
|
At one meeting in Kansas City, Comey was confronted with stinging criticism of the probe.
|
|
Though Argentina was confronted with state violence and a severely devalued peso, hacker culture bloomed.
|
|
Mr Cable is also confronted with two problems that his talents are unlikely to equal.
|
|
There, I was confronted with student stories that sounded not very different from my own.
|
|
" Ritter adds: "Most people, when confronted with a serious crime, they have an emotional reaction.
|
|
Suddenly, as Tzara and Ball predicted, we're confronted with the subjectivity of truth and senselessness.
|
|
The air force, unless confronted with a full-scale war, should be able to cope.
|
|
Being confronted with the incremental updates of hundreds of randos' daily lives is A LOT.
|
|
Prosecutors said when confronted with the allegations, Winner admitted to leaking the classified document intentionally.
|
|
It's only after he's confronted with the grim reality of war that that perspective changes.
|
|
He attacked former President Barack Obama for "choking" when confronted with intelligence regarding Russian hacking.
|
|
The first thing you'll be confronted with is a list of your computer's network adapters.
|
|
But also that she was being confronted with truths about the Force, about the past.
|
|
But the way Spicer conducts himself when confronted with those challenges is entirely on him.
|
|
Preconceptions vanished when he was confronted with the reality of running a government, he said.
|
|
When she's confronted with the worst of what humanity has to offer, she doesn't balk.
|
|
Growing up in suburban America, you're not really confronted with where your meat comes from.
|
|
Yet we're confronted with endless filibusters and polarization that forbids us from getting stuff done.
|
|
He grew tight and quiet when confronted with the past, perseverance being his central creed.
|
|
And playing for amateur classes, I get confronted with music I'd never see in college.
|
|
I was not confronted with interpretations that shocked or challenged or enthralled or enraged me.
|
|
We are once again confronted with global instability, xenophobia, discrimination, destructive climate change, income inequality.
|
|
An Egyptian military operation confronted, with mixed effect, Islamic State movements within the Sinai Peninsula.
|
|
Meanwhile, peaceful protesters are increasingly confronted with snipers, armored vehicles, and smoke and tear gas.
|
|
Democracies around the world are confronted with the same set of issues in modern times.
|
|
Confronted with historical insights and empirical observations, this neat populist narrative quickly falls to pieces.
|
|
So what what should a school do when they're confronted with a situation like this?
|
|
Principals brought in to improve struggling schools can be confronted with a cascade of allegations.
|
|
He's doing the things that a terrified person confronted with a bloody corpse [would do].
|
|
Confronted with double-team attention, Mitchell was not allowed to get into her shooting rhythm.
|
|
Confronted with the question about white societies at the town hall meeting, Mr. King demurred.
|
|
While our individual experiences of discrimination might differ, we have all been confronted with racism.
|
|
When confronted with the evidence of his illusions, he simply dismisses the reality as enchantments.
|
|
Suddenly, he was confronted with structures quite different from anything he had ever seen before.
|
|
Curiously, he seems to have difficulty in acknowledging past contradictions even when confronted with evidence.
|
|
" When confronted with this new phenomenon, the Los Angeles Times asked: "Fascism or Shock Value?
|
|
As Max uncovers the truth about his family, he is confronted with a surprising legacy.
|
|
When confronted with evidence that contradicts his own in his now-famous daily 7 a.m.
|
|
To visit Frieze is to be confronted with the most energetic art being produced today.
|
|
But when the trade adviser was confronted with these revelations, he didn't appear very contrite.
|
|
"Courts confronted with these Nicaraguan judgments have unanimously held them to be unenforceable," it said.
|
|
Stories like these mean that we are increasingly confronted with the carcasses of retail's past.
|
|
Trump has been confronted with a series of embarrassing spending decisions, interviews and internal scandals.
|
|
And unlike many other LGBTQ+ relationships on TV, David and Patrick aren't confronted with homophobia.
|
|
Once they complete that stage, they are confronted with a series of code-breaking puzzles.
|
|
Bernie Sanders were confronted with statements recently made by former President Barack Obama about gender.
|
|
As European voters seem to be tentatively endorsing unity, Britain is confronted with widening divisions.
|
|
Synge wasn't confronted with the dozen or so glamping structures visible on arrival, for one.
|
|
When confronted with prey or a threat, it transforms into a Taser-like shocking apparatus.
|
|
In the end, confronted with a choice between fighting and fleeing, Amazon packed its bags.
|
|
Unfortunately, the fans of Trumpism keep getting confronted with the realities of the man himself.
|
|
When confronted with criticism over their actions, their reaction takes on a belligerent militaristic tone.
|
|
Any time she's confronted with an unpleasant truth, she's let off the hook almost immediately.
|
|
NFL players say the darndest things sometimes, especially when confronted with discipline by the league.
|
|
And when people are confronted with this trade-off, they invariably choose capability over usability.
|
|
But as Paul Manafort said to Jake Tapper when confronted with this fact on CNN yesterday.
|
|
But it's more than necessary when people have been confronted with such physical and moral violence.
|
|
We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now... Procrastination is still the thief of time.
|
|
When confronted with financial infidelity, the partner at fault might just try to brush it off.
|
|
If you said being confronted with your deep-seated insecurities, we have a meme for you.
|
|
People don't so much dislike being treated badly; it is being confronted with inequality they resent.
|
|
Upon entering the gallery space, viewers are confronted with a single picture on a white wall.
|
|
How could any parent continue to say no when confronted with this kind of innocent enthusiasm?
|
|
Confronted with these challenges, the chancellor appears to have decided to retreat into a monarchic stoicism.
|
|
Immediately after walking into the store, I was confronted with both of Rupi Kaur's poetry books.
|
|
There are a lot of hazards that must be addressed when confronted with a hurricane's floodwaters.
|
|
Confronted with his past statements about climate and debt, Trump just pretended he never said them.
|
|
"Even the most virulent critics are caught off guard when confronted with polite cheerfulness," she continues.
|
|
That means French voters may well be confronted with a choice next year that satisfies few.
|
|
Chaos erupts from there, with James melting down with denials when confronted with this new revelation.
|
|
Repeatedly ask yourself whenever confronted with tasks throughout the day: WWKJD – What Would Kylie Jenner Do?
|
|
When confronted with skepticism from the press, he hid behind bad spin and technicality and deception.
|
|
Maybe Jack will be confronted with the opportunity to cheat, and choose to turn Heather down.
|
|
"Recently we've been confronted with the current administration's destabilization of the idea of truth," Berman said.
|
|
Jeb could again be confronted with questions about possible areas where and his brother may disagree.
|
|
This experience taught me a lesson, and being confronted with religious zealotry marked me a lot.
|
|
" Walk into Sephora and you'll be confronted with signage that designates those products "Clean by Sephora.
|
|
Many people, if confronted with a taco truck in their neighborhood, would probably be quite pleased.
|
|
On draft night, front offices considering Fox will be confronted with a pair of related questions.
|
|
Confronted with a smoggy city, I'd choose a catalytic converter over a pocket copy of Walden.
|
|
When Ronald Reagan was confronted with demands for information, he often initially resisted before finally agreeing.
|
|
A man is confronted with the task of cleaning the apartment where his daughter killed herself.
|
|
When confronted with the fundamentals of harmony and form, he asked why any systems were needed.
|
|
There is an impulse, when confronted with a new photograph, to insure that it remains unblemished.
|
|
The Confrontation Clause grants criminal defendants the right to be confronted with the witnesses against them.
|
|
" On the other, viewers are confronted with existential questions such as "What are you afraid of?
|
|
Now that Trump sits in the oval office, however, these naysayers are confronted with a contradiction.
|
|
The protagonist is a blues singer, Eleanor, who is confronted with not just sexism but racism.
|
|
And yet to be confronted with it over 2,000 times in a small space is unnerving.
|
|
Instead of being confronted with the inevitable challenges of such a union, I could idealize it.
|
|
But honestly, I felt fortunate to be confronted with such a small collection of her belongings.
|
|
Mariana falls into a new relationship but is quickly confronted with a situation she didn't anticipate.
|
|
Toward the end of that South Lawn speech, Trump was confronted with his tweets telling Reps.
|
|
He's soon confronted with the depth of Washington's corruption, seeing where money, ambition and power intersect.
|
|
But confronted with Mr. McConnell's neglect of criminal justice reform, Mr. Trump has remained uncharacteristically passive.
|
|
The only question mark hovers over how Brazil will fare when confronted with elite European opposition.
|
|
It won't be too many steps before you're confronted with an end-of-aisle liquor display.
|
|
Depends how bad the shortages are and which patients you're being confronted with at your facility.
|
|
Confronted with traffic on Interstate 95, he and Mr. Ge decided to take a different route.
|
|
Confronted with these market failures, economists are seeking to explain better what it is they do.
|
|
But then I was confronted with six vague options, and needed to write a custom response.
|
|
Conway is not the only Trump administration official to be confronted with hostility in public places.
|
|
Are police departments reacting differently now when confronted with video evidence showing the misconduct of officers?
|
|
"Facebook often cites privacy concerns when they're confronted with the facts of our investigation," he said.
|
|
Confronted with his social-media posts about Crimea, he said his Twitter account had been hacked.
|
|
Dr. Rago recommended getting "active about your thoughts and feelings" when confronted with affecting diet talk.
|
|
When confronted with the report on Thursday by a local television station, Wade declined to comment.
|
|
Now we're confronted with a nihilistic project of just saying there's no such thing as facts.
|
|
Confronted with the Sisyphean task of improving their own user experience, media companies are instead doing what the music and movie industry did when confronted with a superior unsanctioned user experience: They are responding with legal threats and attempts to make the unsanctioned user experience worse.
|
|
Those who insist there is no threat must testify under oath and be confronted with contrary facts.
|
|
If you decide to do so anyway, be prepared to be confronted with everything—there's no mercy.
|
|
How does Trump respond when confronted with these basic facts that directly contradict his attack on Mueller?
|
|
And trade on top of it are part of what U.S. diplomats are confronted with each day.
|
|
When confronted with news that could threaten his agenda, López Obrador has chalked it off as false.
|
|
"When he's confronted with a humanitarian disaster, sometimes he will say, 'We should do something,'" Wright says.
|
|
Each time he was confronted with a new witness who police said had damning evidence against him.
|
|
KLM regrets the inconvenience caused to its passengers who were confronted with this sudden change of circumstances.
|
|
"This is a time where tech CEOs are really confronted with some extremely difficult situations," Benioff said.
|
|
Many of the women confronted with boatmen demanding a fee were forced to give up their jewelry.
|
|
But tenure also puts schools in a difficult position when confronted with allegations of professorial sexual misconduct.
|
|
For example, when string production moved to Mexico, string makers in Pennsylvania were confronted with job losses.
|
|
"I was being confronted with images I had just seen in a museum" dedicated to documenting racism.
|
|
"Even with all those hippies out there?" one San Antonio resident said when confronted with the statistic.
|
|
And as homeowners return to survey the damage, many are confronted with vivid memories of the fire.
|
|
Clyde is confronted with a terrible dilemma, reminiscent of "Sophie's Choice", which the author explores without flinching.
|
|
"The situation these officers were confronted with was critical: a matter of life and death," Rowley said.
|
|
When confronted with a large plastic garbage bag, Eric made a valiant effort to take a bite.
|
|
Critics say that the keyboards are unreliable, and prone to breaking when confronted with crumbs or dust.
|
|
Each character is confronted with one or more of these challenges during the course of the opera.
|
|
Joel, confronted with zombies, is in every way the opposite of the survivalist NRA machismo wet dream.
|
|
He said he would treat us "with heart," but here we were, confronted with his heartless decision.
|
|
Confronted with a strengthening opposition, Mr Najib might choose to hold the election sooner, rather than later.
|
|
When confronted with "lock her up!" chants about Clinton from the ticket's supporters, Pence typically doesn't respond.
|
|
Two captive gibbons were recently confronted with this tiny menace, when a rat wandered into their enclosure.
|
|
Because everyone needs to channel his or her inner Dom Toretto when confronted with a parking ticket.
|
|
It is not enough just to push back hard when you are confronted with an outraged mob.
|
|
When confronted with the news that Paul's neighbors were not happy with his presence, he feigned shock.
|
|
The media, when confronted with that kind of a White House tactic, has a choice to make.
|
|
You'll be confronted with a cliffside or savannah full of enemies, and multiple ways to suppress them.
|
|
In the entryway, viewers are confronted with a piece that helps decode the rest of the show.
|
|
First, this method only works if offenders feel empathy when confronted with the impact of their misconduct.
|
|
After all, it's fake, mediocre, and it's only fun if you aren't into being confronted with reality.
|
|
Yes, but: The people in this study were confronted with a conspiracy theory they were unfamiliar with.
|
|
Trump is bringing awareness to a problem that many children are confronted with on a daily basis.
|
|
It's a meditation on failure: how keenly people fear it, what they do when confronted with it.
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I've spoken to others, particularly small business employers, who are confronted with premium increases and unaffordable deductibles.
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She unfollowed me out of spite and I was confronted with that information because of Twitter's design.
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Confronted with a plummeting stock market and global ridicule, Trump is back where he started, emotionally speaking.
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Paradoxically, we often find ourselves frozen like a deer in headlights when confronted with a difficult task.
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On the other, they're confronted with information that suggests he's not fit to be in that position.
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Americans find themselves confronted with an uncomfortable question: Are they really ready to accept a Madam President?
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Sixty-two percent of women reported that they were regularly confronted with dead bodies in their neighborhoods.
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Confronted with an unknowable Other, of course the human surrogates react with fear, hatred, and explosive charges.
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But Pastor Tim, and even Paige, is confronted with cognitive dissonance upon discovering the Jenningses' true identities.
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"It's the first time he is being directly confronted with his policies," said campaign spokeswoman Emily Miller.
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When Trump was recently confronted with this story, he denied it in typically boastful and dismissive fashion.
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A few hours into the game, you're confronted with a boss in the form of two gargoyles.
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But outside, we were immediately confronted with the harsh reality of retail stores, especially on Madison Avenue.
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When confronted with similar questions in the past, the Supreme Court tried very hard to find consensus.
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Explaining his decision, Mr. Kwon said the company was "confronted with unprecedented crisis" and needed new leadership.
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Being someone who isn't clearly masculine or feminine, I'm daily confronted with people who don't understand me.
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He is now confronted with a challenge that's familiar to his predecessors, our national security correspondent writes.
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We know because when we're confronted with more complex messages and muddled power dynamics, we short-circuit.
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Confronted with the evidence, North Korea acknowledged the program, prompting the Bush administration to suspend the agreement.
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Most recently, the Council has been confronted with mounting atrocities against the Rohingya ethnic group in Myanmar.
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Even those with health insurance, Warren wrote, faced financial ruin when confronted with a catastrophic medical event.
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Second, research has shown that people tend to ignore risks when not confronted with an immediate disaster.
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In the room at the Columbus Circle station, a worker can be confronted with about 22,000 relays.
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It's another to keep on believing once you're confronted with something that contradicts what you've been taught.
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But that was the fact viewers are confronted with in the sexuality episode of The Goop Lab.
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I felt hurt, as this was the first time I was confronted with racism in my face.
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Seeking cyber justice There aren't many legal avenues for women to take when confronted with online abuse.
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Confronted with a decision, a rational actor (as defined by economists) seeks to maximize their own interests.
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Trump is coming to office confronted with the fact that he has to fill 4,000 political jobs.
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Umm Rick Scott is squirming on Fox News while being confronted with questions on John Bolton pic.twitter.
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" Users hoping to stream content were instead confronted with an error message that read, "Cannot play title.
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It's because they stand for the very things we are confronted with every day of our lives.
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Jamie is quickly confronted with his inescapable family legacy because Jocasta wants him to inherit her fortune.
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Hornacek kept the studiously blank and unblinking expression that is his specialty when confronted with probing questions.
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Millions of immigrants come to the U.S. dreaming of opportunity, only to be confronted with harsh reality.
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Being confronted with a specter of one's younger self is a surrealism most of us won't know.
|
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At home, Logan is confronted with her newly single mom and her mom's problematically charming producer boyfriend.
|
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When confronted with the allegations that have been levied against Kozinski, Kavanaugh very quickly downplayed their relationship.
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Along the way she was confronted with the horrific reality of what Dany had done to the city.
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Scientists have also been confronted with the limits of radiocarbon dating, which can only go back 50,000 years.
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But when confronted with more complex and ambiguous foods, such as sushi rolls or smoothies, the system struggled.
|
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Following this training, the bees were confronted with a completely new type of display: a completely blank sheet.
|
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So this scenario raises the obvious question: What to do when confronted with public art depicting your breakup?
|
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Still, the doctors hope their report might help others confronted with a similarly mysterious case of unexplained headaches.
|
|
And yet the news junkie is already confronted with wall-to-wall Trump coverage all day and night.
|
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When confronted with Adam's positive polygraph results, however, Parker began to cooperate and confessed that he acted alone.
|
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"She's been confronted with the human reality of this," and now she's a no, Wikler said of Capito.
|
|
"Many are in a precarious situation if they are confronted with any kind of financial shock," she said.
|
|
Sean and Daniel, two boys of Mexican descent, are confronted with problems related to family, immigration, and race.
|
|
Those moments when you're confronted with waves of demonic monsters aren't filler material like in many other games.
|
|
Sometimes she's confronted with downright hatred, especially once she began running for public office and became more visible.
|
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Facebook is becoming an echo chamber that prevents us from being confronted with opinions we don't agree with.
|
|
Confronted with the corpse of his pregnant girlfriend, Hong Kong officials say Chan turned again to the suitcase.
|
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When confronted with a haul of debt, your first step should be to stop making the job harder.
|
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That's what supplies the initial jolt of familiarity and recognition a reader feels when confronted with his poems.
|
|
The politics-as-fun bubble will eventually burst when Labour is confronted with hard-choices and difficult sacrifices.
|
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Lackey said she is confronted with such confusion most election cycles, and this year has been no exception.
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I was confronted with the fact that I needed to do something with my life and my privilege.
|
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It's the closest thing to hygge we can get when confronted with venturing out into the real world.
|
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But shops were confronted with outbursts of violence between customers fighting to get their hands on the product.
|
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But when confronted with questions about his age, he replied with good-natured humor on a process question.
|
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Now they finally have them, they are confronted with a choice - stay on the attack or move on.
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It is unknown whether the other 62 percent have been confronted with a formal presentation of the evidence.
|
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The GOP was also confronted with the reality that most Americans support the ACA's protections for preexisting conditions.
|
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"Our intention has never been to make the cheapest product," says Lisberg when confronted with the pricing question.
|
|
Being confronted with a price tag could make them more cognizant of the value exchange they're voluntarily entering.
|
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Third, the putative jihadists are confronted with a "counter-discourse", sometimes with the help of (often Muslim) mentors.
|
|
Melissa Ponder tells PEOPLE she "absolutely" considered herself a suspect in the murder when confronted with test results.
|
|
There's not much else you can feel when you're confronted with this kind of shame face-to-face.
|
|
In 220006 he will be confronted with his most competitive general election race in more than 2202 years.
|
|
Confronted with Dinneen's account of their interactions, Icahn deferred to his lawyer, Jesse Lynn, who disputed several points.
|
|
Last year, Airgas was confronted with another challenge, when the activist investor Elliott Management emerged as a shareholder.
|
|
Pay attention to the challenges presented in situations you're confronted with, and try to imagine solutions for them.
|
|
In Iraq, serving in a medical unit, every single day confronted with that high human cost of war.
|
|
Perullo shockedWhen confronted with the fact that it was an item bought through his website, Perullo looked shocked.
|
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After the company was confronted with Jun's angry tweets, it quickly fixed the blackouts, Mr. Rodríguez Salas said.
|
|
Image: damn_unique/FlickrEvolution has already solved many of the challenges engineers are confronted with on a daily basis.
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You have to come to terms with them in a different way, when you're constantly confronted with them.
|
|
Mr. Aiello was "confronted" with the Fitbit information during questioning, said Brian Meeker, a San Jose police detective.
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"I've been confronted with my biases yet I am embodying a 'journalist' identity more than ever," he wrote.
|
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Many people were never confronted with this before, so I think the confrontation alone is a valuable experience.
|
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Several performing arts institutions have been confronted with complaints about the behavior of some of their leading artists.
|
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Now that she considered herself their equal, she was confronted with all the ways they seemed to disagree.
|
|
Outside the cells, we're confronted with the difficult-to-reconcile fact that we're quarantined and the guards aren't.
|
|
As entrepreneurs, we're confronted with countless decisions every single day that have the power to redefine the business.
|
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We don't want to be bombarded, or even confronted with anything slightly uncomfortable, let alone politicized or polarizing.
|
|
Upon entering the house, I was confronted with intense questioning about issues surrounding my mother's trust and estate.
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One week later, confronted with its further spread, the WHO revised its decision and did declare the emergency.
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I think our job is to be constantly confronted with our own assumptions that we carry with us.
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Silke turned her nose up at the chicken feast and backed away rapidly when confronted with the broth.
|
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Along Interstate 30 in West Dallas, Texas on Tuesday, motorists were confronted with a highly opinionated construction sign.
|
|
But after a stint living in China, Forgacs was confronted with the environmental costs of rapid economic growth.
|
|
What will the gatekeepers of privilege do when confronted with gold-star applicants who have a criminal record?
|
|
I immediately felt sick to my stomach, as I always do when confronted with imagery associated with Nazism.
|
|
And when confronted with your documentation, they'll likely conclude that you were awesome, and they just missed it.
|
|
This is belief to the bone and utter refusal when confronted with the facts to grapple with reality.
|
|
In this perilous situation, the unit was confronted with the choice of where to build a winter camp.
|
|
When confronted with hard evidence that they are wrong, many will simply double down on their original assertions.
|
|
As North Korea rapidly progresses in its weapons technology, we are being confronted with increasingly more difficult choices.
|
|
We are being confronted with an administration that is emboldening white supremacists while simultaneously weakening civil rights protections.
|
|
Election or not, the commander in chief failed to act when confronted with clear evidence of foreign interference.
|
|
At a young age, I was confronted with total strangers reacting to the death of their loved ones.
|
|
Manfred, a lawyer, has been commissioner for two years and has already been confronted with several unusual cases.
|
|
Even when confronted with facts that disprove the narrative of American disengagement, European officials simply don't believe it.
|
|
Even though we're confronted with, basically, 14 multiple-choice questions — the answers are on the page, somewhere, right?
|
|
But what if you were confronted with a map of your path on a normal day years ago?
|
|
Last week at New York's LaGuardia Airport, employees and flyers were confronted with "endless lines," ABC News reported.
|
|
Jason Chaffetz of Utah and Diane Black of Tennessee -- were each confronted with impassioned constituents during simultaneous events.
|
|
No one can change the past, even after being confronted with a stark reality of what had happened there.
|
|
And in this video game, dynamite is an excellent option when you're confronted with a merry band of hatemongers.
|
|
Here she was, breaking down barriers and shattering disability stereotypes, yet confronted with a barrier to accept the award.
|
|
A Border Patrol agent, confronted with arriving refugees, referred questions only to the President himself, according to court filings.
|
|
Even established artists lean toward abstract or flat art when confronted with the virtual reality software's fast 3D canvas.
|
|
Confronted with persistent inequality, some young Chicanxs turned to their cars as a means of finding their own way.
|
|
Beginning in 1973, policy makers were confronted with both rising inflation and a contracting economy, a condition dubbed stagflation.
|
|
It's an even more sordid story that Épinal-based attorney Pierre-André Babel was confronted with, back in 2009.
|
|
WHENEVER it has been confronted with crisis in the past, Britain has summoned up leaders worthy of the challenge.
|
|
Anyone watching the Dolphins play this season is confronted with a more answerable question: Are they the league's worst?
|
|
And yet I can't help but be inspired by the move Pinterest took when confronted with the same question.
|
|
So, seeing it on television is like looking in a mirror: We're confronted with what lust actually looks like.
|
|
When the reader is confronted with endless streams of images, everything is reduced to one shared hierarchy of meaning.
|
|
Uber argued that it's an "information society services provider" rather than a taxi service when confronted with similar charges.
|
|
Every day students are confronted with problems they don't understand, and their typical response is to text a friend.
|
|
A man who operates in the athletic shadows, he was confronted with his hours of undercover interviews and recanted.
|
|
Now, woman is confronted with the necessity of emancipating herself from emancipation, if she really desires to be free.
|
|
But we did need to see Littlefinger confronted with the consequences of his actions, and that was grimly gratifying.
|
|
But, being confronted with the incremental — and, often, mundane — updates of hundreds of randos' daily lives is A LOT.
|
|
Confronted with what is seen as a "whitewash", many prominent black Americans are saying they will boycott the ceremony.
|
|
After being confronted with the results of the different expert examinations, he confessed his presence at the crime scene.
|
|
When repeatedly confronted with U.S. intelligence evidence, the Russians have pretended that the illegal missile simply does not exist.
|
|
One of the tenser moments of the film occurs when the Rolling Stones are confronted with their own racism.
|
|
When they leave the security of backstage and Kim is confronted with thousands of concert-goers her anxiety spikes.
|
|
When confronted with evidence of abuse, many quietly have fired the suspected abusers and failed to warn future employers.
|
|
Donald Trump can't stop complimenting Kim Jong-un ... even when he's confronted with the fact the dude's a murderer.
|
|
Senators fleeing DC after dropping monstrous health repeal bill will be confronted with these guys at the airport pic.twitter.
|
|
But the measured response also reflected the balance all former presidents face when confronted with divisive or charged moments.
|
|
Cookie visits Lucious afterwards, and she is once again confronted with the reality of where she and Lucious stands.
|
|
Confronted with consistent, passionate opposition from the public, Republicans aren't relenting their attacks on people with pre-existing conditions.
|
|
When confronted with differing political views on social media, 83 percent said that they tended to ignore the posts.
|
|
She stayed calm and carried on, just as mothers throughout the centuries have done when confronted with childish behavior.
|
|
No TMI; no mention of a judge's irascibility or punitive remarks when confronted with an annoying or aggressive litigator.
|
|
He thrives on chaos and hate but acts aggrieved when confronted with the real-world consequences of his behavior.
|
|
Sarah Paulson To be fair, if we were confronted with a killer clown, we'd hide under the table, too.
|
|
"Ticino is confronted with Italy," says Norman Gobbi of the Ticino League, a local party that backs immigration curbs.
|
|
Those infected were confronted with messages to pay $85033 in bitcoin to unlock the files on the infected computer.
|
|
Nonetheless, I had the opportunity to get better at my craft because I was confronted with so many challenges.
|
|
What's especially disadvantageous is drinking too quickly, because then your body is confronted with a higher concentration of alcohol.
|
|
On taking over both the Royals and the Cardinals, Herzog was confronted with big ballparks carpeted in unholy Astroturf.
|
|
No matter what evidence he's confronted with, he sees the entire investigation as about him and his election victory.
|
|
Supernatural forces may be an accepted part of Thai culture, but Mama Ning still finds herself confronted with skeptics.
|
|
His writings are especially helpful for those looking for appropriate responses when confronted with very specific, very obscure situations.
|
|
By June, many of the reporters unaccustomed to covering the House were confronted with the Speaker's Lobby dress code.
|
|
Authorities have dampened sensitivity to these risks for so long that investors may over-react when confronted with them.
|
|
When moving through the space, visitors are confronted with reflections and refractions of both the Laughing Snake and themselves.
|
|
What's a scientist supposed to do when he's confronted with evidence that all the other scientists might be wrong?
|
|
Confronted with the aftermath of mass assault in a society still reeling from war, Bangladesh was compelled to intervene.
|
|
For instance, how would he respond when confronted with what he told The New York Times Magazine in 2010?
|
|
When confronted with gaps in its mosaic of sensory input, the brain seeks to fill them—not always ably.
|
|
You'd react negatively, too, if confronted with people who are better versions of what you wish you were yourself.
|
|
One of the many joys of being in a relationship, after all, is being confronted with your own bullshit.
|
|
I head into the interiors section, where I'm confronted with an array of choices to further customize the Turbo.
|
|
While the call was connecting, I was confronted with a giant front-facing view of my social distancing look.
|
|
In the real world, people are confronted with microaggressions and people need to decide what they want to do.
|
|
European leaders, increasingly exhausted by the Brexit process, were confronted with the task of deciding on a third extension.
|
|
Celia Keenan-Bolger plays a woman in her 30s suddenly confronted with what seems to be her future self.
|
|
Celia Keenan-Bolger plays a woman in her 2581s suddenly confronted with what seems to be her future self.
|
|
Northeast Oklahoma City was confronted with the problem of dollar stores after its last grocery store closed in July.
|
|
Consumers may be furious if confronted with a $25 bottle of Fleurie that has doubled in price to $20043.
|
|
Each time a person, whoever it is, is confronted with that choice, they can take one of two paths.
|
|
But, not for the first time, when he was confronted with something that he desperately wanted, Johnson lost focus.
|
|
Now they're confronted with these allegations and Jackson doesn't have many allies on the Hill willing to protect him.
|
|
Whenever I did, I was confronted with the question of what it was, precisely, that I expected to witness.
|
|
She urged them to make the right decision when confronted with a choice between direct orders and constitutional duty.
|
|
Young voices matter, too, especially as they are confronted with the massive problems their elders have created for them.
|
|
Or are viewers, confronted with more TV series than ever, turning away from shows after they have sampled them?
|
|
Early in his tenure, Buttigieg was confronted with the ways in which well-meaning policies can have unintended impacts.
|
|
Attendees worked on role-playing scenarios, acting out what would happen if they were confronted with an uninterested lawmaker.
|
|
Welch says that she is outraged that she was confronted with these sorts of religious exemption arguments in 2019.
|
|
And even when you're confronted with something that's inconsistent with what you thought, you ignore that, you minimize it.
|
|
When confronted with risks that could be financially devastating, consumers are driven to mitigate and insure against such perils.
|
|
"They keep saying that lessons are being learned, but we keep getting confronted with the same abuses," she said.
|
|
Despite the setback, the effort contributed to an environment in which the NCAA is consistently confronted with alleged injustices.
|
|
But confronted with pictures of the two together, he admitted being in a "personal relationship" with her since 2014.
|
|
It is not the first time the president has found equivalence or diverted attention when confronted with divisive events.
|
|
A New York Times reporter was recently confronted with a nightmare scenario: How does one interview a master interviewer?
|
|
But with beauty, she was confronted with a problem: She couldn't find any information online about vegan beauty brands.
|
|
FB: When confronted with the loss that animates writing, sometimes one wishes to sink down to the lost object.
|
|
Hollywood sight-seers on the famous walk of fame were confronted with an unusual edition to Trump's Famous Star.
|
|
When confronted with direct contact from humans or reef-damaging sunscreen chemicals, corals experience stress, leading to coral bleaching.
|
|
And when I was confronted with that psyche, as an adult, at Cooper, it was a little too much.
|
|
But in the past year, a lot of black people supporting Trump have been confronted with the president's racism.
|
|
It was only when confronted with gross incompetence that he managed to muster the authority he otherwise found elusive.
|
|
It may prove more difficult to hold the line if the EU is confronted with a more conciliatory British proposal.
|
|
Texas is solidly Republican statewide, but in O'Rourke Cruz was confronted with a telegenic young opponent who electrified Democrats nationwide.
|
|
My family migrated to Germany in the 60s and i got confronted with racism as long as I can remember.
|
|
There were a whole bunch of groups who were trying to do that, and they were confronted with serious challenges.
|
|
"[People] know they haven't managed their money well, and they don't want to be confronted with the truth," Sanders said.
|
|
Trump has been confronted with a series of administrative crises while struggling to move the ball on key policy priorities.
|
|
But the same tactics that carried him to the Republican nomination faltered when Trump was confronted with a single opponent.
|
|
Young people in 2016 know that things in the world are bad, because we are confronted with that every day.
|
|
In no other profession does one learn to kill, and is one confronted with the danger of dying in war.
|
|
After handcuffing Machada, deputies entered the home where they were confronted with "a gruesome scene," a sheriff's spokesman tells PEOPLE.
|
|
The two leading nuclear powers were confronted with existential challenges as their respective nuclear arsenals were ballooning out of control.
|
|
A Supreme Court nominee who lashed out with angry, partisan attacks when confronted with allegations he sexually assaulted a woman.
|
|
Some parts are prospering—leave Cardiff's railway station and you are soon confronted with evidence of a recent building boom.
|
|
Basically my family is still being confronted with a hate crime against Emmett Till and it's almost 65 years later.
|
|
When then confronted with a robber, he may start to notice the threat and feel fearful, and thus respond violently.
|
|
But now that carriers have gotten things started, they've been confronted with pushback against the next-gen wireless technology's limitations.
|
|
Males born of mothers given unadulterated drinking water all quickly assumed a submissive posture when confronted with such a stranger.
|
|
When confronted with the footage, Davis allegedly said he was fine and planned to leave campus Friday for spring break.
|
|
Confronted with this sort of enemy, people understandably focus on the potential for scientific breakthroughs that will deliver a cure.
|
|
But when confronted with a phalanx of heavily armed officers, it is hard to see who would refuse to comply.
|
|
If confronted with that kind of opportunity — our humanity for a kingdom of glitz and popularity — who would say no?
|
|
"This is someone who openly lies about a congresswoman and then when confronted with his lies won't apologize," Gallego said.
|
|
" Sullivan concluded, "When confronted with racism and lying, we can't run and hide in the name of neutrality and impartiality.
|
|
When confronted with a debt choice, ask yourself whether the debt you are borrowing will make or cost you money.
|
|
As soon as you come up the stairs to the exhibition, you're confronted with a life-size photograph of Winehouse.
|
|
But last night, Issa was confronted with a dilemma at work that begs the question: Is she woke or nah?
|
|
Obama, when confronted with a fearful, angry electorate, chose to either dismiss it or stoke it to score political points.
|
|
" But confronted with the idea that Trump may have lied to him, fake-Spicer responded, "But he wouldn't do that.
|
|
"Don't eat the fucking candy," he sighs to his companions when confronted with a Gingerbread House late in the film.
|
|
On television we are often confronted with three or four heads each yelling at -- but none listening to -- the others.
|
|
People are more likely to die when they are confronted with temperatures they don't expect and thus aren't prepared for.
|
|
I watch people who frankly duck and get out of the way, because they're confronted with that kind of challenge.
|
|
In that scenario, senators are predictably confronted with a take-it-or-leave-it proposition that undermines the deliberative process.
|
|
While most branches of government benefit from robust encryption, law enforcement and intelligence agencies are directly confronted with its downsides.
|
|
Curiously, this dream of a Muslim paradise finds itself confronted with another dream at once antagonistic and similar: the West.
|
|
While many found increased freedom, particularly in the former Soviet-bloc, the world was also confronted with harsh new realities.
|
|
He let us merely see, how heavy the decision did weigh, which we saw us confronted with, guilt or guilt.
|
|
When confronted with this season's tottering tower of new travel literature, I found it easy to sympathize with poor Pascal.
|
|
And the Giants appear to have a new attitude when confronted with adversity: They have decided to go down fighting.
|
|
Stepping in, I'm confronted with a smell like manure and air so thick that my throat feels like it's blocked.
|
|
Rhonda Levand was confronted with the sometimes harsh consequences of that reality in the case of her daughter, Raynbow Gignilliat.
|
|
When confronted with the above evidence, Donaldson declined to explain and requested the presence of an attorney, the affidavit states.
|
|
Yet Dr. Ljungqvist is confronted with the apparent futility of his efforts to put an end to state-sponsored doping.
|
|
" ANGELOS "We had a great time meeting with him and talking about the problems that we were both confronted with.
|
|
Once inside, I'm confronted with the sight of 203-odd jars of shochu infused with everything from elderflower to eel.
|
|
It's a question I often pondered when confronted with my abysmal bank balance in those early days of abject poverty.
|
|
At any moment we can be confronted with an untruth, but it also has wider political impacts on our lives.
|
|
When confronted with this, McCarthy appears unfazed by the prospects of a Democratic takeover in the general elections this November.
|
|
"Now, do Republicans in the Senate, when confronted with something that might actually be signed into law, hesitate?" said Wessel.
|
|
When you load up Dreams, you're immediately confronted with the elaborate and beautiful creations from the developers at Media Molecule.
|
|
They are confronted with a barrage of images of scientific experiments, both biological and synthetic, that introduce The Oscar Project.
|
|
Castillo's father, John Castillo, said he had talked with his son about what to do if confronted with a shooter.
|
|
As he pressed ahead, he was confronted with the question of whether to incorporate this changed reality into his novel.
|
|
" We appear to be confronted with two very different sets of criteria regarding what can be considered a "safe space.
|
|
A contrary rule could cause major headaches for a new president confronted with vacancies across the senior levels of government.
|
|
That myth is quickly fading, especially when confronted with "gongkai" (公开), and the ability to build a $12 cellphone.
|
|
Such questions tend to surface whenever we're confronted with the fact of our mortality, whether in specific or collective terms.
|
|
When confronted with the dreaded "What happened?" question at events, Dr. Kerulis suggests preparing a statement to deflect the topic.
|
|
Pilots should follow Boeing's manual when confronted with this anomalous situation, the company initially wrote in its advisory last week.
|
|
Holdouts will be confronted with a lot of pressure to show unity in the opening of the new Democratic Congress.
|
|
When confronted with another creature, it immediately senses whether it is stronger and may do harm if it feels threatened.
|
|
Instead, he's confronted with secrets from a childhood that he's forgotten, linked to a scroll that he carries with him.
|
|
A safe city confronted with terror This weekend's tragedy at Walmart has united El Paso's residents in an unprecedented way.
|
|
" It said its troops were confronted with burning tyres and "large amounts of rocks" and "responded with riot dispersal means.
|
|
In the past, carmakers had almost always acquiesced immediately when confronted with evidence of emissions violations and cooperated with regulators.
|
|
So as the end of his presidency draws close, America is confronted with the reality of what is being lost.
|
|
Walking through One at the Brooklyn Museum this year was like being confronted with all of New York City's ghosts.
|
|
Now, though, progressives are confronted with a situation where meddling with the legislative process and overriding popular opinion seems desirable.
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He has threatened to dismiss the Philippine Congress and form a revolutionary government if he is confronted with uncooperative legislators.
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As fire seasons grow in length and intensity, leagues and athletic governing bodies will keep being confronted with the problem.
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If you're like me, you feel a pang of guilt now every time you're confronted with one of these policies.
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Veterans returning from Vietnam, who should have been greeted with respect for their service, were often confronted with hostility instead.
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When confronted with a venomous snake bite, the victim must act quickly before the reptile's poison leads to irreparable harm.
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Rather, the bull is now confronted with a formidable counterpoint to an emerging vision of a new kind of power.
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When confronted with its hard, U-shaped shell in Los Angeles last June, he wondered: How do you eat it?
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Anyone confronted with the words brain tumor knows the fear and bewilderment associated with learning a new language under duress.
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For the third time in less than four years, voters heading to the polls are confronted with an existential decision.
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Confronted with that simple fact, all that's left is to engage with your work and apply who you already are.
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Congress is fortunate that the three issues they are confronted with do have a ready diagnosis and an effective cure.
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It's easier for us to judge as a society when we don't have to be confronted with the violence itself.
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During the hearing, when confronted with the allegations that have been levied against Kozinski, Kavanaugh very quickly downplayed their relationship.
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In the second room, a teapot is confronted with an eerie phantom of antique silverware, projected in elusive three dimensions.
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Like Trump, Lord is willing to offer half-truths and insults, and doesn't back down when confronted with the facts.
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Lear said that being confronted with this situation forced him to adopt a level of independence well beyond his years.
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The victim gets to ask the questions they need, and the offender is confronted with the impact of their actions.
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People see their work on advertisements, on websites, and in street art and are confronted with something they've never seen before.
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"I don't want to change the rules of the Senate, and I hope we're not confronted with that choice," said Sen.
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The Game of Thrones actress proved she has no problem laughing at herself, especially when confronted with her years-old tweets.
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To be in his own nation's capital, confronted with the contempt and hatred that had arguably birthed Trump, felt inescapably unjust.
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That sentiment resonated with viewers for a reason; we reach for it when we're confronted with the darkest parts of humanity.
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"ASGCT understands and profoundly sympathizes with the desperation that patients can feel when confronted with dire clinical prognoses," the statement read.
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Yet when these women join the workforce, they are confronted with the many challenges of being a working mother in Japan.
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" The John Wick: Chapter 3 star continued, "So all of a sudden I was confronted with the back of Oprah's head.
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Those who go on the rollercoaster will be confronted with sinister Devil's Snare, a plant that entangles humans in its vines.
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After Biden was confronted with a question about deportations in the Obama administration, Harris went where the other candidates had not.
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This is especially true when you're confronted with the idea of parallel worlds and digitally created versions of characters and places.
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But also how the world may view certain moments and what people do or do not do when confronted with that.
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Yes, but: Software programs that determine how an AV reacts when confronted with only undesirable outcomes will present challenging legal questions.
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Many users complain of stress when confronted with the brutal realities of the digital meat market, and their place within it.
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He simply plays like a very young man confronted with the potential loss of the most important person in his world.
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That all changed when he was confronted with the kind of guys who actually watched his output for the first time.
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" She glances at the tube with bored disdain, a look most North Koreans cultivate when confronted with expensive Western brands. "No.
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Cities around the country have been confronted with demands to take down Confederate monuments and symbols in the aftermath of Charlottesville.
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And when confronted with a problem, scared workers find ways of covering it up or getting around it with inefficient practices.
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President Emmanuel Macron of France, confronted with gilets jaunes at home, has not been eager to spring to Mr Ghosn's defence.
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Many traders are searching for the quick 230 percent gain but more often than not, they are confronted with huge losses.
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Many investors are searching for a quick 214 percent gain, but more often than not they are confronted with huge losses.
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Thomas, who'd had so little to say for himself, was suddenly confronted with a track record no one would ever want.
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Bahlsen may have illustrated what not to do when you're confronted with human rights violations from your family's Nazi-era past.
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Suddenly, both Dre and Bow are confronted with their own double standards about the differential treatment of their son and daughter.
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On March 9, the couple headed toward Langtang in Rasuwa district, but did not turn back when confronted with a snowstorm.
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They are instantly confronted with Ice Nation who've taken up residence there and also enslaved some Skaikru people long thought dead.
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On June 20th, the team was confronted with a video depicting the death of a young woman named Neda Agha-Soltan.
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There seems to be a mutual assumption that patients don't want to be confronted with anything that comes out of them.
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Under the new tax law, some taxpayers may be confronted with an unexpected tax bill, or one much larger than anticipated.
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Trump denied that he had ever groped a woman when confronted with his words at the second presidential debate of 2016.
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And yet, our first impulse when confronted with new technology is to use it exactly as we did the old thing.
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Another study that came out last year confirms men and women have different attitudes when confronted with a partner's sordid past.
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Murphy vowed he would steadfastly oppose Puzder's confirmation, adding some Republicans may do the same when confronted with the businessman's record.
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Quist blamed a botched gallbladder surgery when confronted with a series of attacks that he had unpaid property taxes and debts.
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Trump is never wrong, always right, and when confronted with any suggestion otherwise, he will sooner self-destruct than admit error.
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That said, the bees really struggled to transfer their newfound skills when confronted with the opposite of what they had learned.
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Confronted with inequality, they tell us the problem lies, not with the system, but with the individual and his incurable deficiencies.
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When actually confronted with the messy realities — like the country electing Donald Trump president — we shut down just a little bit.
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Days ago, two members of his security detail were confronted with the danger of the drug in a Chicago hotel hallway.
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And in recent months, they have been confronted with a new challenge: the effects of President Trump's trade war with China.
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Confronted with these forces, there is little incentive for our democratically elected leaders to question the goal of the ultimate cure.
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When confronted with a Washington Post-ABC News poll where 60 percent of respondents said they disapproved of the president, Sen.
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In fact, we anticipate that when confronted with the demonstrable flaws in his proposal, he'll keep trying to bob and weave.
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It just means that this is the state of our current medical system and culture when confronted with mental health problems.
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If — or, more likely, when — they're confronted with such an expense, they'd probably have to sell something or go into debt.
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Readers of her books will gain an understanding of an economic approach to weighing up risk when confronted with conflicting advice.
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But Mr. Levy was then confronted with that age-old show business conundrum: How do you prevent yourself from being pigeonholed?
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Confronted with the $12 price for the blanket, he demanded a conversation with the airline's office, all while at 30,000 feet.
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Then again, it's not implausible that a society confronted with an endless stream of death might become desensitized to horrific violence.
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When I was confronted with just the bare facts of poverty and inequality in America, it always disturbed and confused me.
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Individual The techo-utopian dream of Merchise slows to a crawl when confronted with questions of freedom of expression and politics.
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"The commissioner can be confronted with novel situations that are not per se identified in the roster of fines," he said.
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But when you do find yourself confronted with it, take a moment to evaluate it for any sign of constructive criticism.
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The proposals would create a quota mechanism to deal with exceptional situations when a country is confronted with an unmanageable crisis.
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When the case goes to court, I know I'd be confronted with a lot of the details about how Anthony died.
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When Goldman started GS Bank this year, it was confronted with complaints that it could not handle all the prospective applicants.
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Sanders, on the other hand, seemed out of his depth when confronted with how he would respond to the current crisis.
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Research by Harvard political scientist Ryan Enos suggests that when confronted with different racial groups, even liberal white voters turn rightward.
|
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At New York's LaGuardia Airport, ABC News reported that both airport employees and flyers were confronted with "endless lines" on Sunday.
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It was the first time in memory that a German management had been confronted with such a vote of no confidence.
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It's called self-compassion: the practice of being kind and understanding to ourselves when confronted with a personal flaw or failure.
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After the 2012 election, Harry Reid was confronted with his lies about Mitt Romney's tax returns during the 2012 presidential campaign.
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Kay isn't exploring the real world; instead, it's a kind of dreamscape where she's constantly confronted with issues from her past.
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Now I know what to do when confronted with egregious stereotypes: Look directly into their eyes and flatly demand an apology.
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Which is why many building managers and co-op boards confronted with this problem are now turning to clinicians for help.
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Over the years, Mr. Navalny has been confronted with numerous legal entanglements, all of which he has dismissed as politically motivated.
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In Donald Trump, however, evangelicals were confronted with a candidate who pledged allegiance to conservative ideals, but embodied none of them.
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In 1974, Lofgren, a young law student, was working as a congressional staffer when Congress was confronted with the Watergate scandal.
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However, there are many examples of "almost discoveries" with a 3 sigma discrepancy, which have disappeared when confronted with additional data.
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" Floyd Abrams, a First Amendment scholar and lawyer, said the lawsuit was a "difficult situation for BuzzFeed to be confronted with.
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He has been confronted with legitimate questions about his mayoral record on race and policing and has struggled with black voters.
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Campbell said once again, the hospital -- the only level 1 trauma center in San Francisco -- was confronted with a mass casualty.
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The person to whom he was referring, a senior vice president, resigned after being confronted with the letter by her boss.
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That "seasonal creep" left shoppers confronted with pumpkin beer just as they start to consider buying a malty, sweet Oktoberfest lager.
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Confronted with an array of choices, from The Chapel in the Glen to Gatlinburg's Little Log Chapel, couples have their pick.
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Sometimes he'd even open a YouTube video in the operating theater when confronted with a particularly challenging surgery or unexpected complication.
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But soon after she returned home to her two teenage children, she found herself confronted with a different kind of catastrophe.
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When confronted with the reality of what unionization means for many workers, it's no surprise that today's workforce wants something different.
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After all, the next occupant of the White House would be confronted with the devastating economic repercussions of such a calamity.
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As a journalist, I'm often confronted with the ways race defines how we see and treat one another as human beings.
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Almost every day, officers were confronted with knifings, shootings, disembowelments, and "dump jobs"—bodies that showed up in parks or rivers.
|
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During her three-hour ordeal before the House Mrs May was confronted with opposition to her deal from every shade of opinion.
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It can be painful observing white people attempt to recognize or work against their privilege—especially if they're confronted with the topic.
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We cannot sit Idly by nor will we speak silently when we are confronted with such violence against members of our community.
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At this point I did what every sensible customer does when confronted with an abject lemon: Returned it for a full refund.
|
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" Then, she was confronted with footage of her father saying exactly that — "If they have to, they're going to use lethal force.
|
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Prosecutors are often confronted with the task of making extraordinarily difficult decisions regarding the many kinds of repulsive criminal conduct they encounter.
|
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Confronted with Donald Trump Jr.'s big game hunting advocacy, Linton was asked whether she'd feel uncomfortable going to dinner with him.
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The researchers theorized that dogs would both open the door more often and quicker when they were confronted with a crying owner.
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This is how all of us feel when confronted with the split decision of what to buy at an ice cream truck.
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But confronted with wife Rachel's body, hanging dead from the bannister, and Jud's slashed corpse upstairs, he can no longer ignore it.
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Entering the exhibition, one is confronted with the glossary of terms and symbols printed on the walls of a transparent, illuminated tunnel.
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Lee is constantly confronted with people from his past who have found ways to coexist with past tragedies both large and small.
|
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He'll be confronted with questions about whether to preserve the Senate filibuster or use the "nuclear option" to advance a Democratic agenda.
|
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The former contestant got a lot of attention while on the show for being confronted with his "side piece" on national television.
|
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Dan Johnson killed himself on a bridge Wednesday after being confronted with allegations that he sexually assaulted a teenage girl, officials said.
|
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Willey also lied to FBI agents about her ex-boyfriend, and confessed to having lied when confronted with evidence contradicting her statements.
|
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But confronted with his newly-tapped running mate's own "yes" vote in 2002, the presumptive Republican nominee offered a very different response.
|
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Rather, Williams said the Fed, when confronted with an economic downturn and interest rates close to zero, should cut quickly and aggressively.
|
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Broadly, "expectations" are vital when considering investment decisions and how the market will perform when confronted with surprising events, he pointed out.
|
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They are designed to spur lending into the economy, which is confronted with a new slowdown in global growth and evaporating inflation.
|
|
Facebook has typically been quick to apologize when confronted with misuse of the platform, promising it will do better in the future.
|
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Confronted with such stark numbers, Refinery29 partnered with Gatorade for its #SistersInSweat movement, in hopes of figuring out why this is happening.
|
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Saudi deputy defense minister Prince Khalid bin Salman said on Twitter late on Wednesday that Houthis will be confronted with unwavering resolve.
|
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But they're quickly confronted with a problem, even apart from his sterling military resume: He left a record inside the White House.
|
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But passengers taking the escalator in one of London's busiest tube stations were recently confronted with a weird rule: Everyone must stand.
|
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Attendees of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this year were confronted with a head-spinning volume of smart-home devices.
|
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Reasonable people would moderate their demands when they are confronted with intractable problems such as a hung parliament and a sensitive border.
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It's not normal for the President to sign off on a public cover-up of that meeting when confronted with the facts.
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The lesson: Teach your kids about drugs and they may make the right decisions about drugs when they're confronted with the decision.
|
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If you're a climate scientist, what do you do when confronted with denial of facts, of scientific understanding, and of reality itself?
|
|
Prosecutors said when confronted with the allegations, Winner admitted to leaking the classified document intentionally -- and she was arrested Saturday in Augusta.
|
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"After being confronted with the results of the different expert examinations, he confessed his presence at the crime scene," the statement said.
|
|
Developed in response to the ancient technology of paper and ink, it's lately been confronted with the primacy of keyboards and screens.
|
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Not to mention, it's already extremely triggering to scroll through social media and be confronted with police violence on a regular basis.
|
|
The company is confronted with unpredictability on the demand side and the need to reinforce its brand to retain its commercial viability.
|
|
People who actively try to dispose of digital materials relating to their recent romantic breakup are confronted with the inflexibility of deletion.
|
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He calls treaty obligations into question, and suggests he would ignite wars with hostile powers if confronted with the most childish indignities.
|
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And Bialik and Galecki were confronted with their first on-screen kiss with each other in the 90s on the show Blossom.
|
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That being said, Switzerland has an agreement with the United States that compels it to collaborate when confronted with legitimate legal requests.
|
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"More than 100 million people are potentially affected that already now are confronted with a (multitude) of instabilities, including war," he said.
|
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I suspect few of us were ever all that good at twitch shooters, but we were only occasionally confronted with that fact.
|
|
But, when people were confronted with the prospect of new taxes or the costs of the program, support for single-payer fell.
|
|
Confronted with the reality of a pernicious national debt, America has to become shrewder about where and when it exercises military power.
|
|
More often than not, judges who are confronted with inconsistent prosecutions have affirmed convictions, while, at times, expressing distaste for the tactic.
|
|
Elio is taken aback, at the start, by Oliver's swagger—the hesitant youth, steeped in Europe, confronted with can-do American chops.
|
|
In their role, judges are regularly confronted with legal questions implicating political decisions made and actions taken by members of both parties.
|
|
Sanders seems likely to run again in 2020 and is now confronted with a critical question: Is the 2016 magic still there?
|
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Otherwise we will one day be confronted with the most formidable enemy that has ever existed in the history of the world.
|
|
When Mr. James flew to Washington to conduct field research on the Quileute language, he was immediately confronted with its extreme fragility.
|
|
The SDF, which Assad dubbed the "only problem left in Syria," would be confronted with force if negotiations fail, the president said.
|
|
In my experience, which includes extensive travel in other countries, Americans often seem disoriented or even horrified when confronted with imperfect dentition.
|
|
Imelda tells Greenfield's cameras that she was close to a nervous breakdown when confronted with the many responsibilities of the political wife.
|
|
Confronted with Cruz's non-endorsement, the Trump people seemed to decide they could crush him under a chorus of boos and antipathy.
|
|
Trump was confronted with audio of him talking about women in deeply misogynistic terms just before the 2016 election and won anyway.
|
|
Pollia told the class how she volunteered at a soup kitchen on Skid Row, what she saw, what she was confronted with.
|
|
And there is no denying that our technological society is confronted with many issues for which science can add perspective through fact.
|
|
For some buyers confronted with the high cost of New York City real estate, moving to the suburbs is a no-brainer.
|
|
The tragicomic irony: We are confronted with complex challenges, but the zeitgeist does not encourage candidates or voters to respond in kind.
|
|
But sometimes that likeness falls short and we are confronted with something that is not quite human but not quite un-human.
|
|
The result is an abstract and conceptual visual testament to how ways of life bend and collapse when confronted with the web.
|
|
The state "is once again confronted with significant questions about the provision of medical care at this regional jail," Mr. Herring wrote.
|
|
But her family is still confronted with media coverage that treats her private sexual history as though it somehow justifies her death.
|
|
According to Manfred's statement, when the Red Sox were confronted with baseball's findings, they ceased what they were doing and cooperated fully.
|
|
They are now confronted with the answer, in the form of a long paper with a simple title and echoes of Turing.
|
|
You're going to have straight white men who go see this and have to be confronted with the reality of their existence.
|
|
Jones's approval rating is a decent 41 percent, but he's confronted with the challenge of a majority-Republican electorate at the polls.
|
|
I understand that it's not something everybody wants to be confronted with in their daily lives, but I think it's so urgent.
|
|
Should Louis C.K. and Aziz Ansari return to live stand-up, the first people confronted with a difficult choice will be bookers.
|
|
Unlike Robo Wunderkind, Kano doesn't teach you a fictional coding language; instead, you're confronted with Java, Unix, and Python from the start.
|
|
These can be enriching, even if your stomach drops when confronted with a tab that exceeds the cost of your first car.
|
|
When they powered down their devices, these declutterers were suddenly confronted with empty stretches that they had no idea how to fill.
|
|
Occasionally, even the elite succumb to the temptation, as United and José Mourinho did when confronted with Guardiola and City last month.
|
|
Mr. Macron is confronted with violent protests and a widespread domestic crisis of his own making in France, his presidency at risk.
|
|
A number of technology product categories are confronted with the challenge of selling what is ultimately an experience rather than a product.
|
|
Perhaps the R.S.F. commander thought he had to act because the evidence was undeniable and he was confronted with the angry villagers.
|
|
Yet, confronted with numerous disagreements over fundamental issues, today's European leaders have taken to discussing "strategic sovereignty" for Europe with renewed urgency.
|
|
When confronted with a pathogen, versus an Ork, we see the person next to us as a threat and not an ally.
|
|
"Our society and the Swiss economy are confronted with enormous challenges," Swiss National Bank Chairman Thomas Jordan said at a press conference.
|
|
Last week, the President told reporters, "I don't take responsibility at all," when confronted with his administration's failure to provide widespread testing.
|
|
Just like the Instagrammer in orange above, who was confronted with so much pushback that she decided to delete the post. Wow.
|
|
Once inside the airport, you're confronted with services like CLEAR, TSA PreCheck, and Global Entry, which all require you to spend more.
|
|
"Whatever an individual can learn to do to decrease anxiety would be helpful when they're confronted with the food," Dr. Abramson said.
|
|
The next time you're at a fancy market confronted with a shelf of pricey options, you'll know which chocolate to reach for.
|
|
When confronted with the evidence that his consultants were encouraging the option above all others, he stated that he did not care.
|
|
This could encourage respondents to answer more favorably when confronted with questions about the U.S. and its president or policies, Pew said.
|
|
When confronted with the unknown, the WHO recognizes that it must "nimbly move" and that this involves creating platform technologies, explained Fauci.
|
|
When confronted with the ballistics evidence, he asked for a lawyer, the interview ended and he was arrested, according to the affidavit.
|
|
The 85-year-old widow in her flat cannot be confronted with an overnight benefit cut and told to get a job.
|
|
Asahi, confronted with a graying and shrinking market at home in Japan, has meanwhile been looking overseas in recent years for growth.
|
|
He focuses, instead, on the harm homelessness allegedly causes others—him, his supporters, housed people who are confronted with homeless people's existence.
|
|
I rarely actually saw the darker side of him, although there was one occasion when I was confronted with it head on.
|
|
People talk about stereotyping as an energy-saving device where you don't have to think of everything that you're confronted with fresh.
|
|
Confronted with such testimony, the younger Mr. Trump during his court testimony backed off his assertions and acknowledged he had been mistaken.
|
|
Even when we're confronted with all the evidence, there are all kinds of cognitive biases and emotional reasons why we might resist.
|
|
And of the rapid turn of face the other man made when confronted with my sudden inexplicable-to-him change of heart.
|
|
Clean out your closets and cupboards, and invariably you are confronted with a pile of possessions in need of a new home.
|
|
Unlearning fear But that still leaves the question of why Honnold's brain works the way it does when confronted with frightening stimuli.
|
|
This isn't the first time that some of the Women's March organizers have been confronted with questions about their connections to Farrakhan.
|
|
The only color ever is in the flashback, when Aurora is in the city and she's confronted with other people and other things.
|
|
She's confronted with this truth when Ed gives her a speech about how he feels like he's not her "one," her soul mate.
|
|
"They may still have a nightmare or feel uncomfortable when (confronted with memories), but it doesn't dominate their life anymore," Beidel told CNBC.
|
|
When confronted with Drogon's firepower, these mercenaries fled and were quickly dispatched, led by their commander, the out-of-his-depth Harry Strickland.
|
|
When confronted with Adam's positive polygraph results, Parker allegedly began to cooperate, confessing to police that he acted alone to kill the girl.
|
|
" When confronted with the possibility of going to prison, Miller admitted to PEOPLE in April: "I'm afraid of being physically abused or raped.
|
|
The U.S. president can call for an emergency drawdown from the SPR if the country is confronted with an economically threatening supply disruption.
|
|
Confronted with such evidence, Cohen acknowledged that he received the instructions from Trump during his interviews with the special counsel's office, BuzzFeed said.
|
|
The emergence from a car park or railway station to be confronted with a scene of architectural horror—or unprepossessing and unexpected gorgeousness.
|
|
Thomas' breakout book focuses on Starr Carter, a teenager confronted with the very real consequences of present-day racism and violence embroiling America.
|
|
We expect to see a beautiful luxury item and instead are confronted with bodily clippings which are almost universally seen as quite gross.
|
|
Ben Goldman Both Arsov and the Americans, Goldman and Wade, initially downplayed their relationship, and changed their stories when confronted with new evidence.
|
|
But, mostly, I didn't know why I did it — and I was confronted with my lunacy 10 minutes later, when she commented back.
|
|
And it ended up solving a lot of the challenges that we were confronted with, and created this idea of a game cycle.
|
|
On the same day they are confronted with tragedy, another baby is brought to the hospital after being left at a fire station.
|
|
When the Americans were confronted with "intense enemy fire, instead of ducking, instead of retreating, they charged," said French historian Jean-Michel Steg.
|
|
For Neel, the film is much about male insecurity which stems from deeply rooted societal expectations all young men find themselves confronted with.
|
|
The U.S. currency also drew strength as its counterparts such as the euro and pound were confronted with a number of bearish factors.
|
|
Even with him absent from the fight, the Saviors were able to fall back on their infected weapons when confronted with armed resistance.
|
|
The findings of this investigation also make clear that Secretary Clinton misled the American people when she was confronted with her criminal actions.
|
|
When medical examiners are confronted with an apparent homicide, they might call a forensic pathologist to figure out how the person was killed.
|
|
Pattinson said fame impacts a relationship, and the couple has been confronted with racist comments by social media trolls because she is black.
|
|
The idea that during each buying cycle consumers may be confronted with new types of innovative colors and materials is an interesting idea.
|
|
Meanwhile, there's word China's central bank, confronted with a plunge in stock last year, asked the Fed for its "Black Monday" crash playbook.
|
|
But it is hard to ignore such warnings when confronted with the litany of outrageous remarks, proposals and spectacles presented this campaign season.
|
|
The bottom line on the Zika response is this: Unless we are confronted with our limitations we won't work effectively to overcome them.
|
|
Confronted with evidence that boozing, drugs, and dancing till dawn may not be a sustainable model of living, her mood takes a turn.
|
|
Wikimedia Commons When confronted with the pink fairy armadillo's cuteness, some of my coworkers didn't believe that the creature could possibly be real.
|
|
Another disappointment for McConnell McConnell is now confronted with something he never had any intention of facing: another public failure on health care.
|
|
He is the first American president confronted with a North Korea capable of launching an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) at the United States.
|
|
They have also said that it is a useful vehicle to excite viewers who are confronted with more television programs than ever before.
|
|
This holds even when we're confronted with its more ruthless side, marked by a tendency to reward unethical behavior like exploitation or avarice.
|
|
Now, confronted with falling prices and slower consumption, steelmakers are facing the risk of credit downgrades, job losses and cuts in capital expenditure.
|
|
Still, every time I check Instagram or watch reality TV, I'm confronted with a barrage of images featuring celebs and their beauty pros.
|
|
We have arrived at a place of an uneasy truce, but we still face significant problems, which we have confronted with small answers.
|
|
Forced to look inside, you are finally confronted with all that degradation you feared was there but didn't really want to know about.
|
|
Berndt Koerner, deputy executive director of Europe's border agency Frontex, said he was confronted with an "anachronism" in the sharing of migrant data.
|
|
More recently, large food companies have been making bigger bets on snacks, confronted with continued slow sales and an increasingly competitive retail environment.
|
|
Psychologists and other social scientists have repeatedly shown that when confronted with diverse information choices, people rarely act like rational, civic-minded automatons.
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But Hamilton's point is that the court can only assert its influence when confronted with a case or controversy that must be resolved.
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But when confronted with the prospect of their daughter dating a black man — even an accomplished doctor and professor — they express deep reservations.
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On Day Two, I googled "ways to wear boyfriend jeans," only to be confronted with dozens of pictures of celebrities in strappy stilettos.
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Scientists whose job it is to understand the health benefits (and risks) of alcohol are constantly confronted with occasionally confounding results about it.
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Similarly, those with phobias may go to extreme lengths to avoid what they fear and react with extreme distress when confronted with it.
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Not since the Cuban missile crisis has Europe been confronted with a danger as acute as the Arab Islamist threat to the West.
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This could make them more reluctant to give up Revolut, even if they are confronted with a better offer from a competing bank.
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"The numbers are sobering in terms of the magnitude of what our agencies and the industry is confronted with," Skoutelas told CNN Business.
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When insurance plans are confronted with such high drug prices, they'll typically charge patients a chunk of the bill to keep premiums affordable.
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I was a bit slower when confronted with less straightforward instances, and "my" team was the last to fall for me, oddly enough.
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Though approval falls off when confronted with details such as higher taxes, it is clear that the electorate is searching for something big.
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JERUSALEM — Israelis were confronted with a rude new reality on Friday: a prime minister running for re-election while facing indictment for corruption.
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Then, as now, Mr. Dietl campaigned with a pistol, downplayed his connection to the Republican Party and was confronted with accusations of racism.
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Most adults know that when confronted with such a person, the last thing you want to do is make him feel more threatened.
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On Beauty Going makeup-free can be a liberating concept until you're confronted with bad lighting, skin flare-ups or bouts of redness.
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That is ominous, because it raises a grave question about what he would do if confronted with an existential choice about his presidency.
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Last year, the Council was confronted with wide-scale atrocities against the Rohingya ethnic group in Myanmar, but has done little in response.
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Rather, the point is that when confronted with a decision as momentous as whether to turn against a precedent such as Roe v.
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Dragged from museum to museum, neighborhood to neighborhood, they're confronted with so many Famous Buildings that they can all start to blur together.
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If you're headed to a theater to catch a movie this weekend, you may be confronted with an array of viewing choices. Dolby?
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As a fashion journalist, she was confronted with the truth of the garment industry and she felt she could no longer ignore it.
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If confronted with a threat, we don't have time for slow, analytical System 22019 thinking, so we activate System 1 and call 911.
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" Steve Bannon claimed that European countries had been confronted with an "invasion" similar to the one described in "The Camp of the Saints.
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Confronted with an insurrectionary population, Mr. Somoza — the last of his clan — refused to resign, opting instead to hold on via brute force.
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Being confronted with such imagery hopefully makes the visitor reconsider what they think of as "normal" today — a reminder to fight such injustices.
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But he said he strongly disagrees with the notion of banning assault rifles, arguing they can be useful when confronted with multiple criminals.
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Every time I head to the pharmacy to buy the life-saving medications that my son needs, I&aposm confronted with sticker-shock.
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Under police protocol, he said, officers confronted with such a perceived threat are supposed to stay outside the residence and wait for backup.
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As is usually the case when confronted with his own incompetence, Mr. Trump has spent his time looking for somebody else to blame.
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In patients with breast cancer, oncologists are always confronted with a crucial question: Should chemotherapy be added after surgical removal of the tumor?
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Past presidents have aggressively defended their need to receive confidential advice, claiming "executive privilege" when confronted with what they've seen as legislative overreach.
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Instead, Obama and those fighting to succeed him are confronted with a rising threat in ISIS, which has offshoots in Afghanistan as well.
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Once that kind of media attention is drawn in, the public is confronted with questions about the protests: Why are these protesters here?
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For the heirs, it very often is painful to be confronted with their family history, a history of persecution and death and loss.
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We are in a moment where America is really being confronted with its history and this question of what it wants to memorialize.
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The first time we were confronted with this dilemma in the form of George's voyage, it was a mostly harmless small-scale experiment.
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On bad days, if I was confronted with perceived danger that my system calculated I could neither fight nor flee, I became paralyzed.
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When confronted with more reporting, Trump Jr. issued a second statement saying he was promised compromising information about Clinton, but that none was provided.
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There's a philosophy question: If you were confronted with the choice between rescuing your mother from drowning or two strangers, who should you rescue?
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"Once these parties … get into power, they are in a way, if you like, confronted with the reality of running a country," Scarpetta said.
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Confronted with his own campus-carry decision around the same time, Georgia governor Nathan Deal, a pro-gun Republican, reached for his veto pen.
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Raised on this narrative, many Poles react viscerally when confronted with the growing body of scholarship about Polish involvement in the killing of Jews.
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Confronted with the allegations, which Lewis' team and staff believed to be true, Chavez got fed up — directing her anger to fellow housekeeper Laura.
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Throughout "Three Years Later," the former principal is confronted with questions about why she and longtime boyfriend Nick Miller (Jake Johnson) still aren't engaged.
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Confronted with corrupt care homes, dodgy local councils, and gentrification, Pip's journey to representing social inequality as a member of parliament has now begun.
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Confronted with potential foreign technological primacy, the American people rose to the occasion and won the space race as well as the Cold War.
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When confronted with his own use of the term, in the same context with the same underlying point, Biden insisted there was no comparison.
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But waiting until it was confronted with evidence of the deletions and public backlash shows Facebook is only being transparent with users when forced.
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Dominic Cooper plays the character with a disturbing vagueness, eyes shifting and head nodding when he's confronted with his questionable moral actions and excuses.
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He did all this on the same day Mr. Trump was confronted with a House of Representatives vote in Washington authorizing an impeachment inquiry.
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It's upsetting to be confronted with periodic reminders of failed romances and, at times, really unsettling and deflating experiences, like the one with Matthew.
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UKIE have done what trade bodies do when confronted with data like this: start talking about diversity initiatives, and get major stakeholders on board.
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The Sunday scaries are bad enough, but as the end of summer comes into focus, we're confronted with something entirely different: the September scaries.
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Glassdoor sorted through thousands of interview questions on its site to come up with the 50 most common ones job seekers are confronted with.
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Moving to New York and being confronted with a lot of stereotypes regarding Asian-ness brought my own identity to the forefront of awareness.
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He warned of "the danger of the Olympian moral perspective" of outsiders, when confronted with (for example) the turmoil of Russia in the 1990s.
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As a size 14 (sometimes 16) Black woman who loves fashion, I am often confronted with issues that honestly just shouldn't be an issue.
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You can watch in real time to see how well it holds up to milk but how it quickly fails when confronted with mustard.
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Now, after a tumultuous week that saw four incidents in three different states, we are confronted with fresh questions: Could these have been prevented?
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Some shelter pets act out when confronted with all this stimuli, which can result in the overwhelmed animal being passed over by potential adopters.
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Over the years, psychologists have confirmed that when confronted with qualified scientific experts, we implicitly devalue their qualifications if their findings oppose our beliefs.
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In my decade following the trails of North Korea, I was always confronted with these images of monotone buildings and Great Leader-themed slogans.
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"I think when an officer is confronted with a person in a shooting stance they are authorized to use deadly force," Merritt told CNN.
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Every time we're confronted with a foreign policy challenge like this, I'm frustrated by how dishonest we are about how limited our options are.
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I'm sure I need not explain the specific panic and revulsion which seized me in that moment, confronted with my own behemoth under-chin.
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HBO programming president Casey Bloys was also confronted with questions about the backlash this week when appearing at the Television Critics Association press tour.
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Murder was rare in Cottage Grove, and the detectives, confronted with circumstantial evidence and the slipperiness of the dark web, obsessed over the case.
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Con artists face a basic challenge — they have to convince prospective victims of the need to suspend disbelief when confronted with implausibly high returns.
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Talib Shaghati, head of Iraq's Counter Terrorism Service, told CNN that ISIS stragglers in Mosul will be confronted, with capture within a few days.
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Confronted with the horrific images out of held Khan Sheikhoun, Trump on Wednesday asked Defense Secretary James Mattis "for military options," the officials said.
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But I worry that when confronted with some pressures that happen in a big city, I won't know how to guide or mentor her.
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Rather, it is a response to a new fault line that is emerging in Western liberal democracies confronted with the rise of populist nationalism.
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Steinberg alleges Morrisey was lured to McNew's home on the pretense that she would retrieve her belongings, but was instead confronted with a gun.
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Instead, I was confronted with the emotionally distressing image accompanying the article, an image that revisited the fans' deaths rather than celebrating their lives.
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It's just that the options that are listed on the menu are healthy options, so that what kids are confronted with are healthy options.
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Employees should be able to ask for help when confronted with difficult choices, ones that might include a conflict or ethical dilemma, say experts.
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The key question Democrats are confronted with is whether to overhaul the nation's healthcare system, which makes up around 18% of the American economy.
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In the BBC interview, Andrew was confronted with detailed accusations from Virginia Roberts-Giuffre, who claims she was the "sex slave" of Jeffrey Epstein.
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Confronted with a bookshelf curated by the popular new mayor or surrounded by first editions, who wants to download a morning full of emails?
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Every day -- and sometimes multiple times in a day -- he is confronted with a choice: Take the high road or take the low road.
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Confronted with U.S. strength, Putin knows when to pull back, and he is, when it suits him, even capable of making and keeping deals.
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Writers published essays examining the hack through the lens of privacy and consent; readers, frequently confronted with privacy worries of their own, were receptive.
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In Afghanistan, in Iraq, and in Libya, armies soon crumbled and dictators quickly fled when confronted with the full weight of American military might.
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So it would be unreasonable to expect that Kim Jong-un would fare any better when confronted with Trump's unique way of expressing himself.
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Now, confronted with digital disruption all around us, we're all rushing to rekindle the entrepreneurial flame that first put our businesses on the map.
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" When confronted with the increasingly obvious truth that Trump's presidency is creating a climate of hatred through the US, Ivanka said, "I reject that.
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Alienation hangs heavy over the film like it does the lives of so many today, confronted with our bleak economic reality and technological indifference.
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Entering Chelsea's Klein Sun Gallery on the opening night of Chinese artist Li Hongbo's surreal new exhibition, Textbooks, I was confronted with two statues.
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When confronted with the allegations of unregistered foreign lobbying, the Justice Department says Manafort and Gates lied or provided misleading statements about their activities.
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Eight years ago, when Hollywood was confronted with a choice between Clinton and Obama, it was as if the San Andreas Fault had moved.
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Three years earlier, when I first arrived in Germany, I was consistently confronted with the treatment of those with disabilities under the Third Reich.
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Second, confronted with the accusations against him, Judge Kavanaugh made recourse not to reason and methodical process, but to fury and the rawest partisanship.
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When confronted with the threat of its imminent demise, this subspecies does not assume the fight-or-flight crouch common to creatures in jeopardy.
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Like most good startup founders confronted with a problem, they decided to solve it themselves by building a data discovery platform for data scientists.
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I'm often confronted with two kinds of black people on TV. Criminal masterminds who dominate industries stereotypically associated with black people (music, drugs, basketball).
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It's the reason that when confronted with polarizing illusions like the dress, we feel stubborn and perplexed: How could anyone see it another way?
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They're confronted with gendered expectations (including their own) about family on the one hand and sexist barriers to their career advancement on the other.
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Several said they might have difficulty remaining objective if presented with evidence related to abortion or confronted with images that showed children being harmed.
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When confronted with before-and-after aerial pictures of his father's property, the populist leader suggested the buildings were always there, just previously camouflaged.
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The scene also serves as a sly metaphor for what happens when an aging dancer is confronted with a younger, fresher version of herself.
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The protesters occupied the C subway line from East New York to Chelsea, and were confronted with large police forces at the final stop.
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Come July 15, 2019, internet users in Britain attempting to visit major pornography sites will be confronted with a question: How old are you?
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Both Scarborough and Brzezinski radiated the self-confident hauteur of leading art historians confronted with a well-meaning amateur who knows what he likes.
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That is to say, let Soleimani&aposs death be the moment that propaganda fails, that this administration&aposs lies are confronted with the truth.
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Confronted with low presidential character for the first time in his career, Mr. Comey began writing meticulous notes of every conversation with Mr. Trump.
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From the outset of his political career, Mr. Soames was confronted with the shadow of his grandfather but managed to create his own space.
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But the next prime minister, confronted with no clear majority in Parliament for any Brexit option, may be forced to call an early election.
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And when confronted with the evidence that shows that certainly hasn't always been the tone of reporting, they ask: Is it really racism, though?
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When you live close to this direct impact of the problems of war, you're confronted with something very profound that's missing all the time.
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Confronted with information that seemed important but that he didn't understand, the patient did what we all tend to do — doctors and patients alike.
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Washington (CNN)A Republican candidate for governor in Maine suggested that teachers who are confronted with school shooters could fight back with fire extinguishers.
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We can only hope that when confronted with the damage to American interests from this leak, Mr. Trump will learn to be more careful.
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Roberts will undoubtedly face pressure from both sides if he is confronted with such decisions, and Republicans have already begun laying out their views.
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Throughout the morning, commuters were confronted with a lake of brown water lapping at the steps of Lincoln Center and fire trucks gathered nearby.
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In a phone interview, Mr. Perlman recalled his initial shock when, at 13, he was first confronted with Ms. DeLay's meticulously polite teaching style.
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The bottom line is that the world, confronted with two dire threats to the earth's fragile atmosphere, found two planetary responses with positive outcomes.
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The danger is the lack of a balanced approach in the advice he will receive when we are confronted with the next international crisis.
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And when confronted with the names of influential black leaders who have his ear, they'll dismiss those leaders as access-seekers and establishment fixtures.
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Confronted with such time-driven, critical decision-making, an impulsive response from Trump or Kim could start a war with potentially millions of casualties.
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When confronted with the mediocre poll results for impeachment, supporters have often responded by saying that once hearings get started, public opinion will change.
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On a more intimate level, it's a reminder of what we are each likely to remember when we are confronted with our own mortality.
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Inside a police station that closed to the public three years ago, Inspector Warren Hines, a homicide detective, was confronted with a resource crisis.
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Animals are a good bridge to begin to speak with people who might normally shut down a conversation when confronted with sensitive subject matter.
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But when confronted with the plight of a stricken magician this week, they set aside their differences in a scramble to save his life.
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And it really wasn't until the impeachment that his supporters were confronted with unavoidable evidence that he was the worst kind of sexual harasser.
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When making conversation with actors during the show, we were confronted with an awareness of how performative such chit-chat is in real life.
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" Justice Scalia also reinvigorated the clause of the Sixth Amendment that guarantees a criminal defendant the right "to be confronted with the witnesses against him.
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The first lady spoke from a podium in the State Dining Room, focusing on atrocities women are confronted with around the world, including human trafficking.
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Ali Mohammed, 45, a father of two, has little doubt that his children will be confronted with the "challenging times" the country is going through.
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In this exclusive clip, Kate's confronted with her nemesis for the weekend: Her athleisure-clad next-door-neighbor Jill, played by an overenthusiastic Kate McKinnon.
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" Confronted with what you might call a gentle probing on The Today Show on Thursday, a top exec said the company is "working on it.
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"Xi Jinping has been confronted with a lot of resistance to these reforms," said Stephen Orlins, president of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations.
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"People have a certain worldview; [then] they're confronted with evidence that conflicts with the worldview, so they have dissonance, conflict in their minds," Nye says.
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"The viewer is confronted with the contrast between the object's desires to justify their role and their uselessness," as Baron Baron tells The Creators Project.
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It is hard for me to believe that a court confronted with an indictment of Trump would dismiss it in deference to Trump's self-pardon.
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Five months after Bush's inauguration, he was confronted with China's suppression of the pro-democracy movement — its bloody crackdown on demonstrators in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.
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Confronted with the findings and asked to take a drug test, Pontore resigned from the department in June 2015 and was charged with drug possession.
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It is only a matter of time before the FBI is confronted with a video similar to this one, which targeted the British government specifically.
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Nearly eight years after his agreement with Mr. Bush, the Libyan dictator was confronted with a popular uprising as part of the Arab Spring 2011.
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Upon entering, the viewer is immediately confronted with Baldwin and Moore recounting the tales of six individuals, each filled with love, loss, hope, and hopelessness.
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"Most leaders who rise to power on a wave of hope end up disappointing their supporters when confronted with the realities of government," said Bland.
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Being confronted with the numbers on a regular basis, especially if they are rising, may cause depression and even suicidal thoughts in men, Brawley says.
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Make It Easy on YourselfWhen confronted with a difficult calculation, try to find a way of simplifying the problem by temporarily shifting the values around.
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Commenters can also be confronted with their own toxicity rating so they can make a choice about whether that's really what they want to say.
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In essence what they are hoping for is that Islamists, long a movement of protest, become less Islamist when confronted with the reality of power.
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And so we are confronted with the second worldview, the one in which man is in harmony with nature and not somehow outside of it.
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The West, including Britain, has a sorry recent history of behaving like a paper tiger when confronted with Russian aggression, as Crimea and Ukraine show.
|
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We are confronted with amplified doomsday scenarios in which only cyborgs and mutant females are left to rule the earth — or what remains of it.
|
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When first confronted with a mirror, animals initially act as if the individual they see in the reflection is another animal of the same species.
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Outrageous counter-charges and diversions, unsupported by evidence, have become a go-to tactic for our own President when he is confronted with unfavorable news.
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Confronted with the unambiguous conclusion of American intelligence that Assad was behind the chemical attack on Syrian civilians, Putin this week played another familiar card.
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"When I was confronted with the images yesterday I was appalled that they appeared on my page," Northam said during a press conference on Feb.
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In short, it is doing what any country should do when confronted with the historical reality of being poor and far behind more powerful countries.
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Many bad decisions are often made in a split-second, where the employee is confronted with choices that can harm both the individual and firm.
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" "And when he was confronted with it, he was pretty darn shocked that he had said such terrible things, and he feels terrible about it.
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Walking up the steps, I was confronted with a sea of yellow shirts; I sat down to the side and took in the beautiful surroundings.
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Petersen offers some helpful reflections, enumerating what Dowd and her editors should have asked themselves when confronted with the gaps in Thurman's memory about Weinstein.
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The rebels have seized control of territory around 300 meters into the Old City since Monday, but have been confronted with fierce resistance from ISIS.
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This was one of several times that Clinton played to Trump's tendency, when confronted with his own words, to deny that he ever said them.
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What this producer may never realize is that he spoke aloud the exact fear every woman feels when confronted with gender bias in the workplace.
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If we seek out, "like" and comment on angry missives from Bernie Sanders supporters, we'll be confronted with more angry missives from more Sanders supporters.
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And every time I am confronted with a choice between near-certain death or the destruction of my tactical hopes, and my nerve fails me.
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Like all families confronted with this situation, we were prepared to do whatever needed to be done financially to see that our son healed properly.
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This is why formerly loyal associates like Michael Cohen are willing to flip when confronted with something worse than the president's wrath — namely jail time.
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Separately, Clinton was confronted with criticism from former Secretary of State Colin Powell, who accused her of trying to blame him for her email practices.
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Confronted with this latest outrage, former Trump campaign manager Lewandowski reacted on Fox News Tuesday by waving off the issue and cracking his little joke.
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In addition, once pain assessment became a standard feature of American medical practice, doctors found themselves confronted with an apparent epidemic of previously unreported agony.
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"I don't think we've made a determination in terms of campaigning," Sanders said with a laugh when confronted with who may run for his seat.
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But it is safe to assume that most progressives, when confronted with conservative candidates, will prefer incremental, finance-friendly Clintonism over the right-wing alternative.
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Less than a month after taking on the role, Adamczyk was confronted with a challenge from activist investor Dan Loeb and his firm, Third Point.
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Then they are confronted with the much more difficult task of taking a pile of money and making it last over an uncertain lifetime. Hard!
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