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"quandary" Definitions
  1. the state of not being able to decide what to do in a difficult situation

797 Sentences With "quandary"

How to use quandary in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "quandary" and check conjugation/comparative form for "quandary". Mastering all the usages of "quandary" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Well you have a moral quandary there right away, and a very serious legal and judicial quandary.
The man on the train was in a quandary, and the man in the novel he was reading was in a quandary; and as he read the novel, it emerged that his quandary and the one in the novel were essentially the same.
The president has put Sri Lanka in a constitutional quandary.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Masks present a quandary.
So is the quandary you face as her caring sibling.
This market theory presents a quandary for Republicans, he said.
Ignorance is Strength lacks this same level of ethical quandary.
Foreign governments, especially in the West, are in a quandary.
"This poses a quandary for these women," says Bender Atik.
The Senate action poses a political quandary for Mr. Trump.
Consumers don't seem to care about Silicon Valley's political quandary.
So let's assume you're left with the quandary you describe.
The case has presented a serious quandary for American officials.
Mr. Trump's proposed alignment with Russia poses a similar quandary.
Prostate cancer presents physicians and their patients with a quandary.
All of that has left the department in a quandary.
Bret: Pelosi is very sharp, but she has a quandary.
Mr. Karoui's presence in the runoff poses a constitutional quandary.
The partners' solution to their quandary was to scour the internet.
I don't know, I haven't really dived into that quandary yet.
The European Union is in a quandary over how to respond.
And, as it turns out, my quandary was not mine alone.
The research published in Science tries to quantify that philosophical quandary.
After college came a quandary — what to do with that quickness?
The answer to your color quandary is written in the stars.
How will this geographic quandary play out in the weeks ahead?
Let's be sure, though, that you face the quandary you describe.
But I think he's in a quandary of what to do.
It's a "profoundly tricky spiritual fact," Carson writes, describing Weil's quandary.
The resolution poses a quandary for Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi.
Providing the Grinch a poignant back story creates its own quandary.
Carmakers face another quandary as diesel vehicles become a tougher sell.
MoviePass CEO Mitch Lowe has given various solutions to this quandary.
Problems on policy, and a political quandary for the President's fellow Republicans.
Let the smartest among Gen Z and Gen Alpha debate this quandary.
I bring this quandary up to Jazz and get a strong rebuttal.
The whole arrangement highlights the quandary that any successful tech company faces.
Texas grid managers overcame this quandary by creating Competitive Renewable Energy Zones.
Some highlights: As a young engineer at Microsoft, Nadella faced a quandary.
This digital, democratizing shift in fashion has presented designers with a quandary.
The quandary reflects bigger dilemmas in the growing world of narco fiction.
There is no vexing, existential, binary quandary that needs an immediate answer.
Millions of Americans find themselves in a similar quandary this election season.
Gossip Cop's treatment of this particular story presents a broader journalistic quandary.
Or maybe Johnson will be the answer to the Redskins' quarterback quandary.
But American sound and fury mainly serve to obfuscate a domestic quandary.
Anti-Trump Republicans are "in a quandary right now," said Berg-Andersson.
Taste presents an age-old quandary: It is notoriously hard to define.
Indeed, that's the very quandary that Silicon Valley is facing these days.
Jojo's moral quandary forces him to rethink his view of the world.
The dynamic that has caused a moral quandary for the marketing industry.
For Obama and others in his Administration, this posed a moral quandary.
Trump's ascent has also posed a quandary to political humor in general.
For that reason, I find the American Muslim quandary fascinating — and promising.
Democrats' quandary for the current presidential cycle is tougher than either of those.
Too many women needlessly wind up in a quandary when they become mothers.
Here's a moral quandary for you: do you consider yourself a good person?
However, inflation also remains high, potentially putting the central bank in a quandary.
Justice Breyer, for one, would like the Supreme Court to address the quandary.
Finding a cure is becoming critical as this supply-and-demand quandary escalates.
Solid economic growth but subdued inflation has left the ECB in a quandary.
The disconnect presents a quandary for many conservative candidates out on the hustings.
The deeper and perhaps insoluble logical quandary is control of technologies in general.
McConnell's quandary can be seen clearly in the nature of the battleground states.
He put himself in another quandary in the ninth inning, with Turner looming.
Even if this deal is successful, however, OPEC faces another, more serious quandary.
And it's been wandering ever since from one ethical quandary to the next.
It is a quandary we recently wrote about in our recurring Retiring feature.
When Mr. McCraven dug into the album, he was struck by a quandary.
Nevertheless, they share different versions of the same quandary and the same illusions.
Humar had known about her mother's quandary but never really understood its depth.
The point here is that white America was caught facing a moral quandary.
Perhaps discovering what we are without the natural world is today's artistic quandary.
I've kind of worked past that moral quandary for the moment on that justification.
Its latest quandary is a refusal to ban political ads that include false statements.
Each involves this quandary: Is it primarily a class revolt, or a racial one?
Choosing where to exert that strength is a moral quandary without a clear answer.
If it does, the cold dark matter hypothesis is seemingly safe from this quandary.
And even if there's no cheating, these oil exporters face another, more serious quandary.
Auto repair shops face a similar quandary as GST rates vary for different jobs.
MUMBAI (Reuters Breakingviews) - A public penta-scrum poses a quandary for Fortis Healthcare's board.
That cosmic-sized quandary – now known as the Fermi Paradox – still dogs us today.
The quandary relates to the mystery of what these two artists have in common.
"When the superstar misbehaves, employers may perceive themselves in a quandary," the report said.
The overlap of Valentine's Day and Ash Wednesday may cause a quandary for some.
When I spoke to McCorkell, he sounded like he was in a moral quandary.
But as he explained to Mr. Dinelaris, he found himself in a creative quandary.
It also displayed the quandary in which administrations find themselves given federal privacy laws.
Now the Knicks find themselves sinking further into a quandary of their own making.
Adam Matan, 30, feels he is in a quandary because of the travel ban.
A new age of political protectionism has become the latest quandary for large corporations.
But Saccone's quandary is not just about aesthetics, resumes, or even the Trump presidency.
The intra-party rift has created a quandary for Clinton, the Democrats' presumptive nominee.
Here's the thing: NATO and the U.S. troops often find themselves in a quandary.
The discovery posed a wrenching ethical and emotional quandary that persists to this day.
Metamorphosing "The Metamorphosis" into English has been a translator's quandary for over a century.
Just ask Big Bang Theory's Jim Parsons, who has found himself in quite the quandary.
And who's going to let a squishy ethical quandary get in the way of that?
The contestant, unaware that he is being duped, is in a very real moral quandary.
The succession quandary has long weighed on Akihito's mind, Japanese media and royal watchers say.
DURING a revolution, the quandary for stalwarts of the old order is: when to jump?
An understandably overwhelming quandary, considering the endless paths one can veer off into these days.
"That's the quandary I'm trying to avoid the Republicans Party having to face," he said.
Instead, we're about to enter an entirely different new quandary with TV's favorite emotional fam.
There's a moral quandary there, but it's about violence as a byproduct, not a goal.
I decided that I could no longer let the quandary and icy foods torment me.
It's interesting and a bit perplexing to find yourself in this kind of ethical quandary.
It's a modern quandary: Phones are obviously useful tools, especially when you're on the road.
This is a moral quandary over equitable employment practices, mental health and, frankly, racial optics.
It made me uncomfortable and caused an ethical quandary: to tip or not to tip?
Deborah HoltBoston To the Editor: Allison Arieff has articulated the central quandary of my retirement!
The pastor knew many of the Casa Blanca members and appreciated the quandary they faced.
We love it there, but as our children get older we are facing a quandary.
And he has found himself in a quandary: to root for the Yankees, or not?
But the E.M.R. has become the convenient vehicle to channel every quandary in health care.
It's a quandary, both for McLain and her fiery protagonist, and the solution isn't easy.
Closer look: The long-running corruption cases against Mr. Netanyahu have created a legal quandary.
But the decision not to include Elsey in the piece also prompted an ethical quandary.
That created a quandary for Mr. Eng, who wanted to jump into the family business.
It is a quandary facing the nation, and many argue it is hurting U.S. competitiveness.
The fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 added to the Germans' quandary, says Riehs.
Case in point: The quandary faced by House Democrats from areas where Trump remains popular.
That's a quandary that has occupied American legal theorists since the founding of the country.
Other stories have gotten into the ethical quandary of using a proprietary algorithm to sentence defendants.
It would have put him in a quandary over whether or not to file the image.
Particularly since the accession of Kim Jong Un, the United States has faced a deadly quandary.
There is probably no way to resolve this quandary given the current structure of the WBC.
But none of these remains have presented archaeologists with more of a quandary than the parrots.
But after so much attention was given to the designer, he found himself in a quandary.
Local governments have long relied on off-balance-sheet debt to solve a perennial policy quandary.
Yet if you look more closely, this essential quandary of medicine may require a medical solution.
With your outfit quandary solved, the only thing left to navigate is that hefty brunch menu.
That quandary sunk previous repeal efforts this summer, and seems likely to sink this one, too.
The real quandary for them is to switch political strategies, not just switch candidates and platforms.
Brazilian grain exporters association ANEC expressed dismay at the quandary of the Iranian vessels at Paranaguá.
Smallwood's article leaves me, a student of astrology who is also scientifically trained, in a quandary.
The quandary is: What is the quickest way for you to get that lovely refreshing drink?
She owns the top ten times in the event, and her dominance has created a quandary.
The bureau also faced a version of the quandary that haunted Jonah, in the Old Testament.
Putting them in the crosshairs of a potential moral quandary lands somewhere between thoughtless and irresponsible.
But government lawyers faced a quandary: It wasn't illegal for Standard Oil to be a monopoly.
The timing of the economic plan created a political quandary for Mr. Erdogan and his party.
Cyril Ramaphosa, who retained South Africa's presidency in national elections last week, faces a serious quandary.
Back in Ditmas Park, "the whole fixer-upper handyman quandary came into play," Mr. Mansell said.
When the consolidated cases come before the justices in the autumn, the legal quandary may sound familiar.
All that power presents another quandary: How to keep the svelte, 2,750 Project One on the ground.
Of course, even personalized diets would still need to be adhered to, and this raises another quandary.
Although the consequences are less severe for us civilians, we are stuck in the same quandary today.
Lots of lawmakers wonder whether Republican leaders would have been in this quandary if Ryan wasn't departing.
Allowing manufacturers to program the cars at will presents a kind of ethical quandary itself, Millar noted.
In another time, in another place, our British cousins found themselves in a similar quandary over talent.
"They're in a quandary, they're in a total dilemma," Paul said on CNBC's "Futures Now" last week.
I also contacted the US Embassy in Beirut, hoping they might offer a solution to my quandary.
Thus, the quandary for high-caliber players like Ferguson: a year of college or a season abroad?
This creates a quandary: What sort of plausible trade war "win" could fix America's huge trade imbalance?
The smoke pollution poses an unusual quandary for sweltering Alaskans, most of whom live without air conditioning.
For decades stem cells have posed an ethical quandary as they've largely been harvested through discarded embryos.
"The government is in a real quandary over this," said a third source familiar with official thinking.
Now they will be further delayed, waiting for plodding Germany to work through this new political quandary.
President Donald Trump's White House is reportedly facing a quandary: dwindling television ratings for the president's rallies.
America's allies, holding Mr. Trump responsible for the quandary, are in no mood to bail him out.
Here's the quandary for someone like Hahn: How do you measure either Renteria's gesture or Jirschele's gooseflesh?
HBCUs have been a quandary for national Democrats — and attention has turned increasingly toward them in 2020.
"That is the quandary that we face," said Maren Kasper, a White House senior adviser for HUD.
This quandary came via email, and concerns middle schoolers interacting with their peers — a trouble spot for many.
Neither Kim nor Trump can afford to blink and the tussle can put global markets in a quandary.
It is a quandary for those who are concerned about the environmental impact of producing numerous art objects.
It's a quandary that demands a light touch, and where "less is more" may be the best advice.
But for a small part of the LGBTQIA+ community — the A specifically — it continues to present a quandary.
Case in point: Kim Kardashian's rather unique quandary this morning regarding her pulled-from-the-lineup netted bodysuit.
There's the quandary of whether or not to go for a humorous gift and how much to spend.
Hill addresses a central sticking point in the current growth quandary: the difference between "hard" and "soft" data.
Our current quandary is vast, complex and demanding of radical solutions – just when politics seem at their weakest.
The quandary for insurers is that fewer and fewer bonds — generally safe investments — pay a positive interest rate.
Thus, when spring rolls around, I face an annual quandary: where to find a proper summer sport shirt.
Although no two quarterback situations are alike, the Jets' current predicament echoes the quandary Mangini faced in 2008.
This is, in extremely broad strokes, the fundamental quandary facing the Democrats as the 2018 midterm elections near.
To Democrats, and some Republicans, Mr. Ryan and the Republican leadership have a quandary of their own making.
Since these brains were taken from pigs that had already been slaughtered, there was technically no ethical quandary.
Morgan ceases to be an intriguing philosophical quandary when she's actively working to kill every human she meets.
Adding to the quandary is the fact there are just six accredited bariatric surgery centers in pediatric hospitals.
That leaves OPEC members with a quandary: Do they again extend production cuts first announced a year ago?
People with untreated schizophrenia present society with a serious quandary; it's another arena where beneficence and autonomy clash.
So I was just standing there, in a quandary, when Allison's car pulled into the driveway next door.
Dozens of other families whose babies are yet unborn will face the same quandary, officials and lawyers said.
" Fox Factory Holding: "Off-road vehicles has always been a quandary to me as we know from Polaris.
The emerging private label threat from Amazon presents a quandary for small vendors and big, national brands alike.
But the inquiry could also make the election-year quandary Virginia Democrats find themselves in even more painful.
Remember, Trump's impulsive response to the FBI versus Apple legal quandary last year was that everybody should boycott Apple.
Minutes of the Bank of England's last policy meeting, released on March 16, show the extent of the quandary.
This puts Jeff Flake, a Republican senator in Arizona who faces re-election next year, in a particular quandary.
All this leaves Mr Northam in something of a quandary over the work-for-benefits requirement introduced by Republicans.
But it's a good-faith effort to engage with an abstract yet existential quandary—and break genuinely new ground.
I must have been eight years old the first time I had anything resembling an ethical quandary around food.
It's a quandary that points to an awkward dynamic at the heart of politics in almost every Western country.
As technology advances, maintaining privacy or protecting media broadcast rights and corporate intellectual property represent a whole new quandary.
It is always a broadly conceptual quandary requiring the attention of the country's most capable scientists, historians and thinkers.
And that goes regardless of whether she keeps or renounces her U.S. citizenship, a quandary all American expatriates face.
GOP presidential hopeful Jeb Bush faces a "quandary" if he underperforms in Saturday's South Carolina primary, Ari Fleischer says.
Frank Pallone Jr., called for an emergency briefing to discuss the legal quandary, which first surfaced in May 2018.
China also is facing a quandary because South Korea may now deploy an American antimissile defense system in response.
There was always a fire or a humanitarian crisis or a geopolitical quandary set forth from an unhinged tweetstorm.
The uncertainty leaves many men in a quandary, particularly because of the bowel, bladder and sexual problems from treatment.
The family's quandary mirrors life-changing decisions being made all the way from Central America to the Mexico-U.
The VR industry is in a quandary: with the exception of Sony's Playstation VR, people aren't buying expensive headsets.
My colleagues who were thinking about retiring are retiring, and those with health issues are facing a moral quandary.
It presents a particular quandary for North Korea, where new infections are likely to originate near the China border.
The court's four most conservative justices, two of them appointed by Mr. Trump, would find themselves in a quandary.
The accident, which killed a teenage motorcyclist, Harry Dunn, has created a diplomatic quandary for Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
The president's business advisers are in a quandary, said Jeffrey Pfeffer, professor of organizational behavior at Stanford's business school.
All of which is to say that I'm sorry your medical condition should be compounded with this family quandary.
But the American president's suggestion of a grand bargain with Beijing crystallized his quandary in dealing with North Korea.
The episode highlights Facebook's quandary over what kind of role it plays in policing content on its global platform.
Let's begin with the budget quandary that must be unraveled before tax reform can formally move through the system.
But as a patriotic American, I find myself in a quandary when the students recite the Pledge of Allegiance.
Voris, the Rotten Tomatoes vice president, told me that the site is always trying to grapple with this quandary.
This quandary is all the more unsettling because its object happens to be the body of a pregnant woman.
The Martian probe will study the planet's interior and ultimately answer the looming extraterrestrial quandary: Is Mars alive or dead?
"If we can land people on the moon, surely we can find a solution to this quandary," one person tweeted.
But along this exhaustive journey, we discovered a dual-purpose jackpot to our space-plus-style quandary: the room divider.
Instead, reap the benefits now by mapping out five, 10 or even 20 unconventional solutions to your current business quandary.
It is the essence of the current quandary that nominal interest rates can't go much lower than they already are.
Brimsek was so lights out that when Thompson returned, Bruins coach and GM Art Ross was faced with a quandary.
In the past week, one of this fall's most hotly anticipated films has gone from Oscar bait to ethical quandary.
Buzz Merchant, a construction company owner from Wendell, N.C., told me that Bernie Sanders's loss leaves him in a quandary.
The quandary has been far greater for the Germans, whose land is riddled with unwanted monuments to the Nazi past.
DEBORAH MORAN Houston To the Editor: We progressive Democrats are in the same quandary as David Leonhardt's lifelong Republican grandparents.
Then something started to shift and, finally, I made a painting called "Quandary" (2011), which showed how paralyzed I felt.
Clinton and Mr. Trump emerged from the week's votes far ahead in delegates, putting major parties in a novel quandary.
Merely learning about the curious quandary endured by orchestral musicians all over the world fired Mr. Asfour's enthusiasm and imagination.
This all seems to leave Macri in a quandary as to what to do next about the free-falling currency.
Comey faced a roughly similar quandary with respect to the Clinton email investigation, and extricated himself in a similar way.
This quandary is raised with emotional force by my colleague Amy Chozick in her new book about covering Hillary Clinton.
Moore paid him a visit at the company's Southern California headquarters that August and, over lunch, laid out his quandary.
But then Booker's appearance on The Breakfast Club became the prime example of what the invitees saw as Booker's quandary.
Amid all the philosophized quandary, the existential fret, anyone would be forgiven for switching off and picking up a yo-yo.
Maltz thus complicates the quandary posed by Robert Morris regarding the status of his "scatter" pieces while they are in storage.
This quandary proves to be the biggest issue when it comes to Liberty High School's disturbingly expansive culture of sexual assault.
And if this is correct, then nothing the artist (or anyone else) can do will be able to resolve this quandary.
But where there's an organization quandary, there's a Martha Stewart-approved solution, and this clever DIY may be just the trick.
It's probably never going to happen, but I wanted to make a record using an American male persona called Frank Quandary.
One Reddit user sums up this quandary: Theoretically, the law should prevent truly voyeuristic films and images from reaching public consumption.
If Trump now attempts to halt Manafort's cooperation with a pardon or other major move, he may face a similar quandary.
The New York Times published an unusual article on the quandary and its implications last week, all without mentioning any names.
Shapeless, it leads to laxness — whatever moral quandary you bring it, it gives back exactly the answer you'd prefer to hear.
The technique dramatizes a quandary of Diana's life, as her existence seemed to both clutch at and strain away from his.
"I will tell you what's not a moral quandary, and that is the printing of classified information," Gowdy told Fox News.
This quandary might be a tad subjective, but it's something that vegan drug users the world over should surely marinate on.
Mr. Rajoy's tough stance underscored the larger quandary for Catalonia and its deadlock with Spain, which now threatens to fester indefinitely.
Giants defensive tackle Damon Harrison feared the rule exposed players to debilitating, career-threatening knee injuries — and a rules quandary, too.
" Early on, she even confides a plot quandary: "I haven't yet quite determined whose fault Vivvie's death is going to be. . . .
The quandary of Trump's leasing agreement for the Old Post Office Building is an early test of what will be acceptable.
I recognize the moral quandary that the situation presents for doctors whose hope is that killing by the state will end.
This leaves Special Counsel Robert Mueller and other prosecutors in a quandary about how to proceed with these campaign finance violations.
Ford sent his quandary and the surreal images of the Drakes Beach shore to Bay Nature magazine, a local science publication.
He wondered if I knew anyone in Texas who could help him find work — which, for me, was one last ethical quandary.
"The Fed is in a bit of a quandary," said Phil Blancato, chief executive of Ladenberg Thalmann Asset Management in New York.
Authors can take an intangible issue, whether it's a relationship problem, a philosophical belief, or a scientific quandary, and make it material.
The quandary echoes that of Didi Kuaidi, a ride-hailing firm formed when the two companies merged to halt their costly rivalry.
That's because Halloween is obviously the best holiday of the year, which leaves me in a bit of a quandary for November.
Rodchenkov reads excerpts from 1984 often in the documentary, but one, about doublethink in Orwell's dystopia, perfectly describes today's quandary in Pyeongchang.
One of the many risk factors included in the company's most recent quarterly filing with the SEC addresses this quandary head-on.
However, political quandary following a partial government shutdown and President Donald Trump's discontentment with the Federal Reserve continued to pressure the greenback.
HSBC's seesawing skew towards Asia is one of four factors that explain its 211-year quandary over where it should be based.
My student's story, like the fictional young woman it portrays, begins and ends stuck in the midst of an apparently insoluble quandary.
In this piece, David W. Dunlap, a Metro reporter, looks back at a typographical quandary introduced by Dwight D. Eisenhower's presidential campaign.
Second, their collective failure to simply spend the windfall from oil price declines has left policy makers and businesspeople in a quandary.
Whether to speak out or stay hidden has long been a quandary for the millions of undocumented immigrants in the United States.
I don't want to mess it up," Wagoner said, adding that the criminal charge now puts him "kind of in a quandary.
The quandary for the Kremlin is made worse by geology because oil deposits discovered and developed in Soviet times are nearing depletion.
Unless you're headed to an ugly sweater bash, choosing an outfit for your office's holiday party can leave you in a quandary.
The quandary highlights the promise of AI, along with the difficult path companies face in trying to harness the still nascent technology.
She makes that quandary intoxicating: Her uses of structure (with reiterations and literally retrograde movements), space and rhythm keep changing my answers.
The gender gap in finance looks increasingly like not only an ethical quandary but also a financial blow to millions of households.
President Trump, in other words, faced a classic political quandary of having to choose between his party's base and the general electorate.
Lucy mediates this existential quandary with a nihilistic abandon that involves Tinder and a series of meticulously detailed examples of terrible sex.
Republicans are still struggling to resolve their quandary with Roy S. Moore, the Alabama Senate candidate accused of sexually assaulting teenage girls.
Like the majority of young intellectuals, he retained leftist leanings, but, at the same time, found himself caught in an ideological quandary.
This quandary calls to mind the current debate around Brexit: anyone worried about the effects of immigration on his community is marginalized.
This is now the American quandary: The wheels of government are being forced to turn on the erratic whims of an egomaniac.
Leonard H. Perroots, the deputy chief of staff for intelligence there, faced, like Colonel Petrov, a quandary — one with profound potential consequences.
Their fate has presented the US -- to whom much of the world looks for a solution to this problem -- with a quandary.
Fiction was one solution to this quandary, allowing us to suspend disbelief in the way that Coleridge said was essential for literature.
California politicians are in a quandary over whether to offer a bailout or risk allowing the state's largest private utility to fail.
Perhaps the reason there is no definitive answer to the oats quandary is that there was no definitive diet in the Paleolithic era.
"That is the philosophical quandary we find ourselves in as Texas Democrats: Do we go bold or do we go safe," Strother said.
Indeed, the major moral quandary of season two involved Jimmy faking some documents with a copier in order to get Chuck in trouble.
The curator, Koyo Kouoh, of Raw Material Company, has turned what might seem obvious, invisible, or banal into a quandary of infinite possibilities.
Both options touch the country's financial sore points – and represent a quandary for the ruling party ahead of an election due by May.
In a house with five other people going through the same existential quandary, they can work through it, together, once again as teammates.
Because even as she was starring in goal, Hope Solo was a public relations quandary that vexed U.S. Soccer until the apparent end.
Mr Bilash's revelations have placed Nursultan Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan's president, in a diplomatic quandary, since he does not want to antagonise his mighty neighbour.
The latest: The Trump administration's ban on business with Huawei has highlighted those ties, with the global telecom industry facing a significant quandary.
Aside from whatever moral quandary Trump is putting conservatives in, he's apparently also responsible for screwing up their love lives, the Washingtonian reports.
This quandary has been burning a hole in Phillip's pocket since Season One, and by this point, his reluctance is visible from space.
That is an actual quandary allegedly faced by director and explosion enthusiast Michael Bay back when he cast Kate Beckinsale in Pearl Harbor.
The positional quandary is a microcosm of the roster mishmash created over time by a series of unfortunate — and not atypical — organizational events.
" But there's the rub, for the translator into English confronts an instant quandary: whether to translate "cien" as "a hundred" or "one hundred.
When 25 Republicans broke ranks to vote against the rule, Democrats were in a quandary over whether to let the rule go down.
"I really am in a quandary," said John Andrade, 45, a Hispanic Republican who owns a marketing and advertising company in San Antonio.
The district's Democrats now face the same quandary that confronts Democrats throughout these mountains: How can the party rebuild power in the Appalachians?
Aitken, who a year ago was in the midst of organizing his mid-career survey Electric Earth at MOCA, was in a quandary.
"Your heart is in the right place," someone replied, implying that the vote-or-not-vote quandary could not be easily swept aside.
Activity In small groups, students should read the article "A Refuge for Orangutans, and a Quandary for Environmentalists" and look at the photos.
The sole moral quandary in our space that we acknowledged outright was the question of whether or not to sell data to advertisers.
The ethical quandary presented to creators like Kaji, and his parents, is a gray area that people have brought to YouTube's attention before.
There is nothing to indicate that ESPN's premier access stooge has any moral quandary about being the official launderer of the NFL's bullshit.
Now, both are picking up, seemingly ending a quandary for the Fed with core inflation running over its 2000 percent target for now.
Soul music's gospel foundations sustain Baby Rose's strikingly deep, tearful voice as she faces a modern quandary: Should she drunk-dial her ex?
This would leave the Danish central bank in a quandary as it normally follows ECB action yet has good reasons to raise rates.
And given that you were friends with both of them, he left you in a quandary when he told you of his misbehavior.
It was precisely that consumer popularity that Dropbox was hoping to exploit when it launched the business product — but it faced an inherent quandary.
You propagated me without finding a solution to the quandary you created: asking me to solve online abuse while restraining me from doing so.
But Emily not being allowed to call the shots was a little stressful for Fischer — especially when it came to one highly contested quandary.
Related: How to Conjure Friends and Influence Yourself Meet the Artists/Occultists Channeling the Death of Monsanto A Bespoke Occult Glyph for Every Quandary
That puts the Republican National Committee and state Republican parties — the groups actually doing Republican get-out-the-vote work — in a strategic quandary.
They tell the story of the U.S. shale resurgence and the quandary it poses for OPEC as it struggles to tame a global glut.
Still, Facebook doesn't seem to have woken up to this moral quandary, at least in a way that is visible to the world watching.
The quandary for Facebook is readily apparent from a video it began showing customers in February: it teaches people how to delete their accounts.
Birth defects have been a source of debate for Colombia, which has limited abortion laws, creating a quandary for some women who were infected.
The quandary that Belden faced in its manufacturing plant in Indiana exists across the country, especially in regions at the epicenter of the epidemic.
Not wanting to test this quandary on our own bodies, we enlisted Dr. Rick Holley, a food microbiology professor at the University of Manitoba.
The majority of the protagonists in "Back Talk," Danielle Lazarin's debut story collection, seemingly heterosexual women and girls, are caught in this very quandary.
For the filmmakers, Rasmussen is a bad guy, but the ethical quandary here is a little deeper than conservation or exploitation, truth or lies.
That is a significant quandary for the other leaders, who will meet next Thursday and Friday and who must unanimously approve any extension request.
An ethical quandary at Google: Close to 1,000 employees protested the company's move to build a censored version of its search engine for China.
The quandary for Lazy Mom and their peers is how to subvert and interrogate society's thraldom to food without being swallowed up by it.
Then there is the ethical quandary that editing could be used to create babies with desired skills or physical features — with potentially frightening consequences.
Here's our kitchen quandary: When all the cereal is gone from the bowl, my 4-year-old drinks the remaining milk from the bowl.
"Two endorsements highlight the quandary for Democrats as they look for a nominee," by Dan Balz The two youngest members of Congress pick sides.
Economists like Nariman Behravesh of IHS Markit, who says Mr. Trump's proposals could raise growth meaningfully in the next two years, acknowledge this quandary.
But with the main lending rate at -0.35 percent and the Riksbank pumping money into the economy by buying bonds, it faces a quandary.
It is causing a particular quandary for Mr. Netanyahu, who is charged with guiding the relationship, always deep and complicated, with Israel's closest ally.
Parents say they face a quandary: Families who have hired college consultants discussed the pressure to keep up and where they drew the line.
But he also laid out the judicial quandary that Turkey has presented to the Council of Europe and in its broader relationship with Europe.
But in many places Facebook has become a de facto public square, and this presents a quandary for citizens of small countries like Sri Lanka.
So one big quandary confronts Germany if Mr Macron wins and obtains a workable legislative majority: how far to go in any such "new deal"?
This quandary, the confusion between compulsion and will, is also the persistent frustration of seeing characters, humans and hosts, walking a narrow set of paths.
Clinton is far from reaching 235,219 delegates, she is poised to create the sort of mathematical quandary for Mr. Sanders that she faced in 220.
Google Home owners were reportedly faced with that existential quandary last weekend as an undetermined number of the smart assistant-powered speaker hubs went offline.
Before the month is out, however, it is expected to plump for Rotterdam as its sole headquarters (Britain's quandary over Brexit is doubtless a factor).
In May 22016, as part of a physiology class, Carlson and Visich decided to take students on a trip up Quandary Peak, a Colorado mountain.
Almost 50 years later, though, researchers in the Scalable Cooperation group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab revived and revised the moral quandary.
"Frankly, I'm really of two minds at the moment, and I expect to take this quandary with me into the next (Fed) meeting," he said.
In theory, we like the idea of safer streets These are new technological quagmires for an old moral quandary: the so-called the trolley problem.
Much the way toymakers and apparel vendors have accelerated their quest for factories outside China, its special administrative region poses an international supply-chain quandary.
Despite my newly found church community, claiming faith in the Donald Trump era still amounted to an existential quandary—one the Liturgists have tapped into.
The succession quandary is shaping up as a defining test of the power and ambition of Mr. Xi, already China's most dominant leader in decades.
The Obama administration has been in a quandary over whether to issue a permit to allow the completion of the final leg of the pipeline.
"The biggest quandary in the oil market isn't about what's happening right now — with, actually, no lid in sight, " the "Mad Money" host said Friday.
The composition visualizes a fundamental quandary: What do you do if you believe that silence is oppressive, but you're not entirely sure what to say?
As one ethical quandary after another has hit its profoundly ill-prepared executives, their once-pristine reputations have fallen like palm trees in a hurricane.
It is the eternal quandary of German foreign policy: Germany can't go it alone, but Europe is too divided and too slow to step up.
Here's the quandary Trump and Kushner may find themselves tangled in: The Israeli attorney general — whom Bibi appointed — has leveled multiple corruption charges against Netanyahu.
The authors use bland economic jargon to describe that quandary: "The disutility of work would have to be very high" to outweigh work's financial benefits.
That is the quandary facing Kathleen Luton, who was waiting for Kabia in an examination room in a squat county office building in Silver Spring.
We pay our indulgences in remit for our sins, feel a brief respite from moral quandary, lean back and congratulate ourselves for doing our part.
But another anti-Brexit voter, Marie-Therese Nlandu, 64, said she didn't know how to vote, and thought many others were in a quandary, too.
The wide variance presents a quandary for the European Central Bank, which on Thursday will publish an account of its most recent monetary policy meeting.
It has become his cause celebre, his private quandary, which, jettisoned from the sheriff's property warehouse for space, he has moved into his own home.
Revenge is a moral quandary served cold and soaked in blood — all at a time when in the real world, anti-Semitic crimes are rising.
Not everyone who contracts the virus gets sick, a fact that is proving a quandary for scientists and officials trying to formulate a measured response.
The episode took place in Ohio, but it highlights Facebook's quandary over what kind of role it plays in policing content on its global platform.
But to say she has no peers is both a compliment and a quandary, because there aren't a lot of role models to look at.
For thousands of public servants — Democrat, Republican and independent — the election of Donald Trump creates a deep quandary: Should I stay or should I go?
That has left lawmakers representing those areas in a quandary, with some insisting that Brexit must go ahead to respect the views of their voters.
Bets on movies like "Denial," about Holocaust disavowal, and "The Light Between Oceans," a romance involving a moral quandary, were not paying off as expected.
" I'll write a song about some deep existential quandary and explore all these dumb thought waves, and then think "Is it effective to say that?
But the new government has found itself in a quandary, said Richard Giragosian, director at the Regional Studies Centre, a think tank based in Yerevan.
The Federal Reserve faces a quandary in its near-term decision-making: It's hard to be "data-dependent," as officials say they are, without the data.
Arya could even wind up on criminally underdeveloped quandary of Ulthos, which only appears as a small blip in the corner of Game of Thrones maps.
The reason for the quandary lies in the territory's Byzantine capital structure, where 21.6 public agencies owe a combined $120 billion in bond and pension debt.
"Anyone need a passport or something, let us know," says Mr Donnelly, before engaging a group of farmers' wives on the quandary of freezing v canning.
But it does bring up a particular quandary; as anyone with an Amazon Dash button and a cat, dog, or toddler will tell you, accidents happen.
The simple answer for Republicans caught in that quandary, Speaker Ryan chief among them, is to start presenting themselves as a safety valve against Hillary Clinton.
But many of its inhabitants have begun to leave, and those who remain face an existential quandary: with their fleet's original purpose fulfilled, what comes next?
In Overwatch, I've slammed into a brick wall so hard that it's thrown me into an existential quandary over whether I should even be bothering anymore.
The quandary confronting Bay Area sports fans Monday night: Watch San Jose's first Stanley Cup finals game, or the Golden State Warriors' pursuit of basketball immortality?
Raw Data At the Science of Consciousness conference last month in Tucson, I was faced with a quandary: Which of eight simultaneous sessions should I attend?
Guo's asylum request poses a diplomatic quandary for the Trump administration, which must decide whether to expel a high-profile Chinese dissident or risk infuriating Beijing.
But for anyone who speaks or writes about her, she presents something of a quandary: What do you call Daw Aung San Suu Kyi for short?
Take, for example, the main quandary of the Muslim world for the past two centuries: Why have we moved so far backward compared with the West?
To get out of this quandary, Washington must push the Turkish government for a return to peace talks with its own Kurds, which collapsed last summer.
His first quandary will be whether to use the word "Rohingya," which the Annan report avoided, in line with the request of Aung San Suu Kyi.
The quandary of what to do with whale corpses has troubled coastal populations for decades, and has inspired some novel methods for disposing of the behemoths.
The quandary her case poses is an increasingly common problem for European countries: What should they do when citizens, who are also militants, want to return?
In Singapore's quandary of where to put its people, the people themselves — the living as well as the dead — can seem like pieces on a checkerboard.
The result is a perhaps intractable quandary for Republicans who can read the poll results showing that climate change is a prime issue for younger voters.
The Merck Forest and Farmland Center, a nonprofit environmental group in Rupert, Vt., that supports itself by selling maple syrup, faced a quandary of its own.
In that environment, Mr. Ghosn's case presented a quandary for prosecutors, said Steven Davidoff Solomon, a professor at the University of California Berkeley School of Law.
It's a quandary Andrew Yang didn't see coming but is starting to embrace: Being the last candidate of color in the Democratic primary with sizable support.
He lands in a quandary where his intellect counts for nil, where only an approach guided by the ethics of feeling can solve this Hobson's choice.
"Most of the economic data goes into a 'what will the Fed do' quandary," said Kim Forrest, research analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group in Pittsburgh.
"The Fed will be in a quandary if the deceleration in core inflation persists," said Roiana Reid, an economist at Berenberg Capital Markets in New York.
I worry that Apple could find itself facing an analogous (though not parallel) quandary to what Microsoft has faced with its own next-generation Windows app framework.
DAVID STEPHENSONChief data scientistDSI AnalyticsAmsterdam Further to the letter of Michael Ben-Gad (December 17th) I think the appropriate collective noun for economists should be "a quandary".
If Apple opens this up to consumers, it'll solve a quandary for a niche group of dumbasses by allowing people to own more than one Apple Watch.
When the cases come up for argument, the main quandary will concern how to interpret three words Congress wrote over a half-century ago: "because of sex".
But the fact that self-driving vehicles must be programmed ahead of time to respond to any given situation presents a kind of quandary for the industry.
But going into the fourth season of her Comedy Central series Inside Amy Schumer, she faces a quandary similar to the one that once plagued Jersey Shore.
That is a quandary for EU-based SWIFT, which handles most global wholesale cross-border transfers and which is an important cog in the global financial system.
It has decided to base the business in Bahrain's capital Manama - and the considerations it faced are emblematic of the quandary confronting many players across the industry.
THERE'S A QUANDARY FOR ME ABOUT THE VALUATION OF STARBUCKS, WHICH HAS BEEN UNCHANGED FOR THE LAST THREE YEARS, DESPITE THE FACT YOU PUT UP GOOD NUMBERS.
The "trolley problem" sets up a quandary: whether to let a trolley stay the course and hit numerous people, or redirect it and hit just one person.
It has created a quandary for Republicans like Senator Amy Volk, who comes from a moderate district and called this week for Mr. LePage to be censured.
Ms. Merkel, who finally took the oath of office Wednesday along with her cabinet, faces the same political quandary afflicting many industrialized nations, including the United States.
The quandary her case poses is an increasingly common one for European countries: What should they do when citizens, who are also militants, want to come back?
But they did not, even though tests suggested that more people there were taking their pills; further analysis of that quandary will be done, the investigators said.
Still, whoever comes in to replace Ms. Ma is likely to face the same quandary, because that person will be required to register as a foreign agent.
The manteros represent a continuing quandary for the European authorities: It's one thing to allow migrants in, but what do you do with them once they've arrived?
Going forward, some labor and ethics experts are concerned the five-member board will face an unprecedented quandary as it deals with cases involving the next president.
Aiming to solve the investment quandary of campers, several outdoor stores across the country rent gear, including Denver-based Outdoors Geek (which also ships gear) and REI.
Zika is problematic from a public health perspective because it leads to something harmless or disastrous, and that presents a unique ethical quandary for doctors and patients.
"The biggest quandary in the oil market isn't about what's happening right now — skyrocketing prices with, actually, no lid in sight, " the "Mad Money " host said Friday.
That Republicans even find themselves in such a quandary just over two months after Mr. Trump was sworn in is at once extraordinary and not altogether surprising.
But brands are in a quandary too: they are unwilling to penalise their distributors who sell on watches, nor do they wish to compete with them online.
That it is clearly not Sanders now, underscores their quandary with the question of not just who they want to nominate, but who they want to be.
This is the quandary for many Republicans: They are all for reining in spending but want to make certain that their home-state priorities are walled off.
Each episode poses a scientific or philosophical quandary at the top that Krulwich and Abumrad probe over the course of the show, often leading to surprising conclusions.
To the Editor: There is a simple solution to the Republican quandary over repealing Obamacare while keeping many of its provisions: Pass a law renaming it Trumpcare.
And they face an intimate quandary – not simply an intangible question of whether their BlackRock or Vanguard funds invest in a country accused of human-rights abuses.
This Op-Doc video is our attempt to explore this quandary, by listening to a variety of parents and the different ways they handle these sensitive discussions.
News Analysis WASHINGTON — The contrast between the improving health of the labor market and the weakness of other economic indicators poses a challenging quandary for the Federal Reserve.
And despite the moral quandary that one might have serving in the Empire, it is, at least for Thrawn, the only way to prepare for this larger threat.
Faced with such a quandary, Country Life are calling on fellow posh folk to stake their claim, in what is poised to be a class tug of war.
The moral quandary of making this into a business is at the center of Mr. Sen's film, which had its premiere at a Mumbai film festival in November.
The Fed's quandary: The U.S. central bank is raising interest rates under the presumption that such labor shortages will soon cause steep wage increases, and lead to inflation.
But Sturgeon said Brexit had heightened understanding of Scotland's quandary - being forced to leave the EU even though it voted to stay - and that independence itself was inevitable.
Cresset Wealth's Jack Ablin predicts leaping Treasury yields are here to stay — a scenario that could put equity investors in a quandary as the government's borrowing costs spike.
But the U.K.'s unique political quandary at the moment means sterling has no easy way out in any of the possible scenarios to arise before the deadline.
Media gateways and universal remotes that solve this unified device and "too many remotes" quandary are in the market already, and more options are clearly on their way.
Had Iweala kept the focus of "Speak No Evil" on Niru's impossible quandary, it would have been a better novel, if perhaps one destined to be less popular.
If we lived every day as the last day of our lives, the only quandary would be how to find the time to shower love on enough people.
Jeff Smith, a University of Wisconsin professor who studies job programs, said a major quandary is that worthwhile training programs for the poor seldom yield stunningly positive results.
Had my attacker (a "nice boy" in the neighborhood) later been nominated for the Supreme Court, I can easily see the quandary that Dr. Blasey found herself in.
The Khashoggi case has presented an enormous quandary to the Trump administration, which has embraced Crown Prince Mohammed as a valued ally ever since President Trump took office.
For some who wrestle with the impact that their carbon footprint has on the planet, climate change has turned the notion of vacation travel into a moral quandary.
That poses a quandary for those who admire and support the protest movement, but who recoil at the notion of such a unique and vibrant enclave self-destructing.
Suddenly, the days of multibillion-dollar deficits and anguished debates about what to cut have given way to a quandary over what to do with all this money.
Thousands of jihadists and their children have filled Kurdish-controlled camps in recent weeks, posing a major quandary to foreign governments: Should they repatriate their citizens, and how?
This quandary is likely to strike many programs — the total of 96 early entrants approved for this year's N.F.L. draft is just short of the record 20143 in 2014.
For all that, taken together the Trump chronicles throw up another quandary, beyond the issues of accuracy and novelty: whether these tell-alls actually do the president any harm.
That in turn poses a quandary for Iraq's leaders, torn by a choice between Iranian tutelage and meeting the demands of a generation seeking an end to Iran's dominance.
While it's possible the obsession with Jack's demise rippling through the ages ended with his funeral, it seems like Us is now heading into a new death mystery quandary.
PiS, via its factotums in the state media, will exploit this quandary to the hilt, presenting itself as the only party that can be trusted to preserve Polish sovereignty.
When U.S. consumer demand did not ease and retail prices remained steady, the industry found itself in a short-term supply quandary, said Doane Advisory Services economist Dan Vaught.
In his half of the letter, Gates succinctly outlines the environmental and economic quandary that the world faces: a growing population, growing demand for services, and increased energy use.
How to handle individuals captured fighting for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has proved a legal and security quandary for both the Trump and Obama administrations.
As for my own quandary, I eventually convinced a French bank to give me checking privileges under the umbrella account of the US media company that was paying me.
That said, the brand does include an image of one of its bottles shattered on the ground in their promotional photos – so Shower Beer at least acknowledges this quandary.
But at some level, the quandary preoccupying NRG is one that all power producers and utilities will ultimately face: how to make more electricity while emitting fewer greenhouse gases.
Along with gaining a better understanding of the topic, Mr. Gorman developed a moral quandary, as he explains: Holding a wolf pup makes rational thinking go out the window.
Moreover, under an American law, he had to certify to Congress every 90 days that Iran was complying, creating a politically uncomfortable quandary for him four times a year.
Quite the opposite: "If Pretty Hurts" is successful exactly to the extent it engages us emotionally in the moral quandary of beauty, no matter what Amirrorikah we're looking in.
His sermons posed a quandary for the video service because the cleric does not directly call for violent jihad and is, therefore, not in clear violation of community guidelines.
That leads to a quandary for voters: Should they vote in important local primaries — as well as the Democratic presidential primary between former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen.
But within Turkey, many remain fearful of voicing any criticism of Mr. Erdogan publicly, especially journalists, for whom his trumpeting of the Khashoggi case has presented a special quandary.
His current quandary is an outgrowth of Barclays's transformation from a three-century-old British commercial and retail lender, with Quaker roots, into a global banking and trading powerhouse.
And here is a quandary for many such modern sequels, which are all the rage these days, when the paired works share the same program: which to perform first?
I asked him what he thought about the American press corps' quandary when it comes to covering a president, like Mr. Trump, who trades in falsehoods and demonizes journalists.
That puts many "remainers" in a quandary, and may make them reluctant to vote for Labour, particularly if they do not sympathize with Mr. Corbyn's brand of leftist politics.
At first, he thought a standard poodle would the answer to her quandary, but none of the poodles he trialed had the temperament necessary to be a guide dog.
When faced with an ethical quandary concerning two of his classmates, his response shows that the moral part of his education has lagged far behind his grades and popularity.
The corruption charges brought against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel on Thursday not only threaten his political future, they also present the country with an unprecedented legal quandary.
The Trump era has changed that, and exposed a real philosophical quandary: What do institutions dedicated to protecting an open society do when faced with the forces of illiberalism?
The data presents a quandary for the European Central Bank, which ended its bond-buying stimulus program late last year and risks running low on firepower as the economy slows.
" Amazon: Calling the e-commerce play a "quandary" ahead of its report, Cramer worried that Amazon, his charitable trust's largest holding, was "getting too much advance attention from the bulls.
With the new Pixelbook Go laptop, Google presented me with a legitimate quandary: How good does a laptop have to be for me to get over the restrictions of ChromeOS?
The oil glut — the unsold crude that is piling up around the world — is a quandary and a source of investor anxiety that once again rattled global markets on Friday.
Curator Vincent Gille may not be able to offer a completely satisfactory explanation of this quandary with this small, elegant, chronologically organized show, but contemplating the question offers stimulating enticements.
That leaves many state Democrats in a quandary: Should they stick to the moral high ground and seek their resignations, or protect the party's power in a vital battleground state?
Related: A Bespoke Occult Glyph for Every Quandary [NSFW] Nude Occult Rituals Staged Against Norway's Stark Landscape Enter the Dark Scandinavian Wilderness with "Witch in the Woods" Artist Darby Lahger
One statement by the president-elect and another by the secretary of State nominee suggest that the Trump administration may soon find itself in a serious credibility quandary in Asia.
Who better to sit at the heart of this moral quandary than Suarez, a man whose UK press clippings include a racism storm and sinking his teeth into Branislav Ivanovic?
A moral quandary is whether IS-held areas should be denied Internet access thereby cutting off civilians living there, said Rafaello Pantucci, of Britain's Royal United Services Institute think-tank.
Yet that quandary hasn't stopped Brooklyn barber David Arce from become one of the best-known groomers in the borough — in fact, he might be all the better for it.
The Vandermeer anthology is a partial answer to this quandary, laying out the broad strokes of the genre's history, starting in 1897 and running all the way up through 2002.
The product liability case has brought to light a piece of evidence that legal and safety experts say puts Apple in a quandary — one it shares with other wireless companies.
Our quandary is this: No president until Trump has been willing to take on public unions, but Trump lacks the trust to achieve the bold civil service overhaul that's needed.
But the 2016 election — with its rudeness, crudeness, bluster and bullying — has also presented adults with an unexpected, unpleasant quandary: How on earth do they explain Donald Trump to children?
As he and his wife left the Casa Grande Democratic offices for their daily round of canvassing, Lee Seabolt, 70, said the Republican quandary was a matter of simple arithmetic.
Besides creating a diplomatic quandary, the Kurdish deployment to Afrin is depriving the U.S. of allied troops in the campaign to stamp out the last vestiges of the Islamic State.
Yet, the S.E.C.'s new guidance doesn't confront the practical quandary facing public companies victimized by a cyberattack: Going public with news of a cyberattack isn't always an easy call.
WASHINGTON — The decision by New York State to ban single-use plastic bags from retail stores makes it a good time to revisit everyone's favorite environmental quandary: paper or plastic?
Then A brings up a quandary straight out of "The Twilight Zone": What if you could push a button and get all the money you wanted, but someone, somewhere, dies?
Their makeshift imprisonment in flimsy rope restraints poses yet another ethical quandary to our collected heroes, who must again reconcile their basic decency with practical concerns of resources and security.
Those who did not take advantage of early voting are in a quandary: Should they go vote and risk infection, or stay home and automatically withdraw support for their candidate?
The search symbolizes the larger quandary India confronts in trying to enforce a society's rules in a place that has been intentionally set away from the rest of that society.
No. Much of the PTSD angle is ham-fisted, but it does set up a core quandary, and the reason Ellis is here in the woods in the first place.
What's more, the entire quandary could be proven moot by next winter, as people in South Dakota are voting in November on a proposed constitutional amendment to legalize recreational marijuana.
I'm on the fence as to which company will provide my next shirt order, and a new deal this week makes it a doubly interesting quandary: Walmart is buying Bonobos.
Minnesota Confronts a National Quandary The Trump administration is highlighting the struggles that Minneapolis and St. Paul face with disparities in school discipline, and putting a thumb on the scale.
To many Americans, his uncalculated move risks a new American involvement in the Middle East quandary without a clear endgame in sight, summoning the lingering ghosts of the Iraq war.
The Oneida sided with the Revolution, but wall text makes the quandary of Native Americans plain: "How could they preserve their independence in the midst of this vicious civil war"?
The decision by Mr. Comey to appear before the intelligence committee underscored the quandary of the competing claims between the imperatives of a special counsel and those of congressional committees.
And there's a chance the new lawsuit will create an extremely unusual legal quandary: simultaneous nationwide rulings compelling government officials to process DACA renewals, and preventing them from doing just that.
The request, if met by expected White House and State Department opposition, is likely to present a quandary for the longtime diplomat, according to former State Department officials who know him.
Washington (CNN)A big GOP meeting of the minds, possible fallout for Donald Trump after the RNC rumble and a Ted Cruz calendar quandary: Those stories top our "Inside Politics" forecast.
This is the quandary America finds itself in, after the Democrats won the House of Representatives in the suburbs, while the Republicans tightened their grip on the Senate in the sticks.
"The committee is in a quandary about Troxyca ER," Dr. Raeford Brown, Jr., a professor of anesthesiology and pediatrics at the University of Kentucky, said, summarizing the views of the panel.
As you travel this holiday season, bouncing from airport to airplane to hotel, you'll likely find yourself facing a familiar quandary: Do I really trust this random public Wi-Fi network?
The New York Times Magazine article "The Crispr Quandary" presents Dr. Doudna's story as well as the ethical issues she and the scientific community are currently debating related to gene editing.
Avast Photo Space is a new app that aims to eliminate this quandary by connecting to Dropbox or a Google Drive account and uploading the original, high-res photos for safekeeping.
The familiar but altered contours of Mark's past life that he encounters in T2 reflect the film's central quandary, which is a familiar one: Can you ever really go home again?
For my mom, like many of my friends' parents, this opportunity presents an ethical quandary: is it right to charge what the market will bear, even if that price seems absurd?
Another quandary that governments face, especially in China and other countries hit hardest by the coronavirus, is how to balance containing the spread of the epidemic with keeping their economies humming.
Then you remember that this is how the Wolves have consistently operated under Taylor, and it snuffs out the initial pangs of compassion one might have felt for the Wolves' quandary.
But the lethal end to the shooting in Kansas, which claimed the life of Andrew Finch, a 28-year-old father of two, creates a new legal quandary without easy answers.
Most states, though, have yet to change their laws to match the new federal rules, leaving local police and prosecutors in a quandary over what is legal and what is not.
There was a book for every facet of this quandary: "Goodbye, Columbus" for interclass tensions; "The Human Stain" and "American Pastoral" for the perils of passing; "Indignation" for assimilation and intermarriage.
Platt plays the title character, a friendless, phobic high-school senior who gets caught up in a moral quandary—and becomes an unwitting social-media hero—after a classmate's tragic death.
Economic Trends The stock market's turbulent response to the election of Donald J. Trump — first down, then up — presents an interesting quandary: Was the election result good or bad for investors?
" Kalen Petersen, Nashville I appreciate Anderson's attempt to leverage a travelogue to highlight our troubled history's long shadows and today's cultural quandary of questioning patriotism, bigness and the definition of "American.
In addition to the legal quandary, dealing with Mr. Assange, a mercurial personality who is considered a criminal by some people and a hero by others, is fraught with political complications.
The recovery of Diego's hoodensis species also brings up a quandary, one that perplexed Darwin during his adventures in the Galápagos more than a century ago, when he studied the fauna.
And so companies like Climeworks face a quandary: How do you sell something that never existed before, something that may never be cheap, into a market that is not yet real?
Such reviews highlight a quandary for U.S. technology companies, as they weigh U.S. cyber security protections while pursuing business with some of Washington's adversaries, including Russia and China, according to security experts.
"The courts can't order Congress to appropriate money if it declines to do so," wrote Michigan University law professor Nicholas Bagley on Friday in a blog post detailing that quandary for insurers.
Where the Giants will turn for their next coach will be a quandary for management, which likes to hire experienced head coaches, especially ones with Giants ties who have something to prove.
We got Nash and asked him about the great guard quandary in Tinseltown ... can Thomas and Ball share the backcourt together, or does one guy (looking at you, IT) got to go?
The central bank hiked its interest rate target a quarter point in December, but financial conditions quickly tightened and left the monetary policy makers in a quandary over what to do next.
ANONYMOUS This quandary neatly articulates a widespread workplace problem: Where, exactly, is the line between behavior that has a genuine negative impact and the kind that simply drives us up the wall?
When you talk about this ethical quandary and the way people have thought about, when you find yourself in a situation, do you feel like the mood has changed in Silicon Valley?
Marooned in a suburban apartment complex, Julia worries herself into a chicken-and-egg quandary: Will men avoid having sex with a 26-year-old woman just because she's never had sex?
The case of Mr. Kim — who is Korean-born and became a legal resident of New Zealand after moving there as a teenager — poses a political quandary for the New Zealand government.
After a quarter of quiet, the quintessence of Android's brand has quickly changed without quarrel, resolving a quandary and quitting the quixotic quest to pull a Q dessert out of the quiver.
So a month before spring training, baseball is grappling with at least one tainted championship, a moral and practical quandary over using technology and unsettling questions about the credibility of the competition.
While Mr. Trump's policies are one matter, his nominations to his cabinet and other senior positions are another, and there, Senate Republicans who will vote on their confirmations are in a quandary.
He also confronted another professional quandary: whether to exhibit the objects he uncovered as they were, or to gussy them up for popular consumption at Williamsburg, which had become a tourist attraction.
The continuing Democratic quandary is how to maximize essential minority turnout, and at the same time retain — or recruit — sufficient numbers of white working class voters to secure victory on Election Day.
The more mental effort spent trying to divine the name of the next device destined to inhabit your pocket for at least 12 months, the more it feels like a legitimate philosophical quandary.
The digital tokens present a quandary for US lawmakers because, unlike other products, it's not clear which federal agency should regulate them, according to Columbia Business School professor and cryptocurrency expert R.A. Farrokhnia.
Perhaps that's what made Burn All Night so resonant in a year where many of us struggled with the quandary of how to have fun when it feels like everything is falling apart.
Drivers just want to earn some extra pocket money, and riders just want to get home, ideally without the moral quandary that comes with supporting a company that is perennially wracked with controversy.
All of which leaves Mr. Yang and his senior campaign staff — some of whom, before this, had never run a campaign of any kind — with a new quandary: What do we do now?
The question is whether this raises a moral quandary for founders and investors, given that the kingdom was linked to the brutal killing of the US-based Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in October.
"This is a test of pursuing our ideals versus how we wield power in our government," said one Democratic strategist who did not want to be named wrestling with his side's moral quandary.
It means Jack, who is gay and married, has gotten into his own financial and moral quandary, because like every Plumb he, too, has managed to pre-spend his quarter of the nest.
The novel coronavirus outbreak has sparked a public health quandary and threatened to upend that message, all while the candidate who will be Trump's chief rival for the presidency comes into clearer view.
Now, the main lawyer involved in passing on Mr. Paddock's nearly $1.4 million estate to the families of the 58 people he slaughtered at an outdoor country music festival is facing a quandary.
At its 1941 premiere, the psychoanalytic-theme plot — in which Liza Elliott, a fashion magazine editor, goes to pieces over a romantic quandary, requiring the services of Dr. Brooks — came off as daring.
The quandary is this: Since we are but a small group of owners and must see and deal with each other, is it wise or even ethical to report this to the city?
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - As London's police try to manage a rise in non-violent street protests aimed at spurring action to tackle climate change, they face a quandary, human rights experts said.
Near-retirees wanting to shield themselves from nursing home costs face a quandary: Should they eat double-digit rate hikes for long-term care insurance, or should they walk away from their policy?
The asylum application could present a diplomatic quandary for the Trump administration, which is seeking China's help in isolating North Korea after it conducted a series of missile tests and underground nuclear tests.
The trouble is that it's left the second season of "Billions" in a narrative quandary: With Wendy as a free agent, her purpose is as unclear to us as it is to her.
Mr. Menon, in his book, seemed to settle on an answer to India's quandary: "Pakistani tactical nuclear weapon use would effectively free India to undertake a comprehensive first strike against Pakistan," he wrote.
The spectacular boom and bust in the prices of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have presented a quandary for governments around the world, which have taken differing approaches in trying to regulate their use.
The lack of trust manifests itself as a self-perpetuating quandary: Women are hesitant to approach human resources departments, and those departments cite the absence of complaints as proof of a respectful workplace.
Joiri Minaya, who describes herself as a Dominican-American artist, has developed performance work that sometimes starkly, sometimes playfully, and always discerningly teases out strategies for maintaining equilibrium in the midst of this quandary.
SHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) - Shanghai-based Buick dealer Ron Li in late April found himself in an unfamiliar quandary: how to sell off almost 80 sedans and sport-utility vehicles crowding up his dealership lot.
And he poses a quandary for the West: how tightly to draw the circle of punishment around Mr Putin, and how to treat those in his orbit who might nevertheless be agents of progress.
This raises a serious ethical quandary for us: Do we let our neighborhood kids and our own values down by fleeing to a higher-testing public school in a richer part of the city?
This threw Poitras and Risk into a quandary: She'd briefly been romantically involved with Appelbaum a few years prior, and she knew she couldn't leave that detail out of the film, given the allegations.
As Margaret and Lucy deal with that moral quandary, the oldest Wells sister Charlotte (Jessica Brown Findlay) considers signing what's essentially an ownership contract from her wealthy and whiny benefactor, Sir George (Hugh Skinner).
Bloomberg notes that while the production deal has helped to elevate prices, it creates a "quandary" for OPEC and allied producers about how to keep those prices high without igniting even greater shale growth.
Repeatedly when he raises an ethical quandary for discussion, he quickly turns to the least controversial use of nudges, such as anti-smoking initiatives or nutritional labels, to argue that nudges (largely) defuse it.
DEBT QUANDARY The NCR moved to protect borrowers in the wake of a leap of almost 290% in unsecured lending between 2007 and 2012 following measures to tackle racial discrimination in the credit market.
Mr. Rokita, a three-term congressman, said the candidates found themselves in a rare political quandary: trying to impress their case upon only a few people who, in many instances, already knew them well.
Artificial-intelligence-based offerings, for example, can help reduce bias in hiring but are governed by an uncertain legal framework, presenting a quandary for those HR teams that may want to adopt the tech.
Clinton, the loss in Michigan left the Clinton camp confronting an urgent quandary as the Democratic contest moves to other Midwestern states like Ohio, Illinois and Missouri, which will vote on Tuesday: Will Mrs.
Finally, the emerging plan would not answer a quandary that has dogged the bloc: the unwillingness of most countries to welcome significant numbers of newcomers, even those with a clear legal claim to asylum.
This quandary might sound familiar if you've ever walked up to the club, seen a line snaking around the corner and on for eternity, and considered not playing by the rules like everybody else.
" On the quandary embedded reporters can face, Mr. Conroy said, "You want to be a good journalist, and be antagonistic, but you also know that as soon as the candidate loses, you lose, too.
So Europe once again finds itself in a quandary, trying to tread a line between two NATO members, Turkey and Greece, one trying to push refugees forward, the other trying to keep them out.
Leave campaigners are trying to wriggle their way out of a quandary: How to honor the promises they made to their voters, without alienating the 48.1 percent of the country who voted against Brexit.
To the Editor: "The Empty Promises of Suicide Prevention," by Dr. Amy Barnhorst (Sunday Review, April 28), was probably the best article I've ever read on suicide and the quandary of suicide prevention messaging.
Instead of reaching Italy, the group had ended up near the RAF's Akrotiri military airfield in Cyprus, an act of chance which threw them unsuspectingly into a long-running and quickly politicized legal quandary.
Yet the quandary her case poses is an increasingly common one for France and other European countries: What should they do when citizens who are former Islamic State fighters or supporters want to return?
A Good Appetite A summer vegetable quandary: My favorite way to eat zucchini, eggplant and peppers is to roast them until their sugars caramelize, their centers collapse and they turn floppy, rich and sweet.
Still, in expressing criticism of his predecessor, Mr. Biden, Mr. Pence also seemed to underscore the quandary he faces in his proximity to a president bearing a large load of ethical and legal accusations.
Both chambers of U.S. Congress passed a bill supporting Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters on Wednesday, placing President Donald Trump in a potential quandary as he tries to strike a trade deal with China.
Once again, the Fed faces the quandary of what more it can do when it's at zero and can't cut anymore and is forced to contemplate extraordinary, uncertain and controversial measures like quantitative easing.
What leaves me in a quandary as a critic, though, is that it's a cardinal rule of criticism to judge a movie on the basis of whether it succeeds for the audience it's made for.
"Target with Four Faces" exists in the same physical space that we do: it is a mute, damaged thing made of two distinct parts, head and body, a figural presence infused with a nameless quandary.
Building 8's experience highlights Facebook's central quandary as it seeks to diversify beyond mobile ads, which account for 93% of revenue, and expand into the costly business of developing, manufacturing and selling consumer devices.
The president's ethical quandary is the result of his refusal to divest himself of a sprawling network of more than 500 properties that he has amassed in more than three decades as a celebrity entrepreneur.
While the move simplified E.ON, investors are still in a quandary as the parent kept not only its renewable generation assets but also its nuclear plants, which must be wound down and are a liability.
The New York Times Manual of Style and Usage, though, brooks no such familiarity: It advises that the second reference should be Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi, which hardly helps in the "for short" quandary.
House Democrats are in a quandary over whether to begin an impeachment inquiry into the conduct of President Donald J. Trump, based primarily on instances of potential obstruction of justice highlighted in the Mueller report.
Fiction has to have a certain structure: give the audience a protagonist with whom they can sympathize, put an obstacle in the protagonist's way, make him enter a moral quandary about how to solve it.
This sudden reversal has the economists who have long argued we should run the economy a little hot — that is, stimulate it using the government's power to tax and spend — in something of a quandary.
WASHINGTON — With the election of President Trump, the nation's consumer watchdog agency faced a quandary: how to shield the Obama-era institution from a Republican administration determined to loosen the federal government's grip on business.
Their quandary is one faced by business across Europe: Mr. Trump has questioned the assumptions that have underpinned trans-Atlantic commerce since the end of World War II, without making clear what could come instead.
Leaders in Beijing face a quandary: Openly disputing Mr. Guo would give him more prominence, while ignoring him could be read by some as a sign that he is telling the truth, several experts said.
In Barr's Cliff Notes four-page version of the Mueller report -- with just three short cherry-picked quotes from what may be a voluminous document -- he seemed very interested in publicly characterizing Mueller's apparent quandary.
"How the USB stick on the seal poo remains a quandary—the scientists who unfroze the sample are adamant it was too enmeshed to have simply been dropped in it as it were," Nally explained.
"How the USB stick on the seal poo remains a quandary — the scientists who unfroze the sample are adamant it was too enmeshed to have simply been dropped in it as it were," Nally told Motherboard.
Turkey's lira racked up some of the biggest losses after data showed inflation spiked by more than expected with annual price increases hitting a nine-year high of 210.37 percent, adding to the central bank's quandary.
The country's GM experience, told by more than three dozen Monsanto insiders, farmers, scientists and cotton company officials as well as in confidential documents reviewed by Reuters, highlights a little-known quandary faced by genetic engineering.
This helps offset a quandary that comes up while viewing the exhibition: although Schneemann's bodily experiments were so groundbreaking they got her shunned, they also were likely only possible because she was young, thin, and white.
"Nothing good will come of a system in which the chief executive may direct the full force of the state against those he believes have wronged him," Lawfare's Quinta Jurecic wrote last week on this quandary.
Josipovici (who sees in his predicament a parallel with Hamlet's own quandary) chooses to do both, reading through the play section by section (or fold on fold, in his preferred terminology), offering commentary along the way.
The clash of desires and expectations that arises between Shapiro and her father (she wishes to know him; he wishes to remain unknown) encapsulates an ethical quandary with which our society has yet to fully grapple.
The housing market enters the traditional spring buying season facing a quandary: There are relatively few properties listed for sale, even as steady job gains and low mortgage rates have bolstered demand from would-be buyers.
And if England should advance to next Sunday's World Cup final, English fans will face the ultimate quandary: balancing the Wimbledon men's final at Centre Court and the soccer match, scheduled to start two hours later.
The success of China's state-led economy presents, in many ways, the same economic (and ideological) quandary that Japan unexpectedly threw up before the United States when, in the 1980s, it became the world's leading creditor.
It's been an ongoing quandary as investors were already skittish after a roller-coaster first week of March that saw the S&P 500 index swing up or down more than 2.5% for four days straight.
In this lesson, we present students with an environmental quandary to discuss and debate — a case study about the best way to protect orangutans given the wave of deforestation shrinking their natural habitat in Southeast Asia.
It was a period in my life when I kept one rigorously, documenting nearly every romantic and philosophical quandary, every insight, not least of which was my decision to stay abroad and try to write professionally.
So when the White House woke on Wednesday to images of a possible Islamic State attack on Tehran, it prompted a sharp quandary: How does President Trump condemn the violence without seeming to embrace the victims?
It is also an indication of the quandary the ECB finds itself in over the adequacy of the inflation data it has used to justify trillions of euros worth of monetary stimulus to support Europe's economy.
We can reinvent batteries using different materials, solve the recycling quandary, or simply yank more lithium and cobalt out of the ground—but if the industry doesn't sort the issue fast, EVs are going to stumble.
The Iranian attack also poses a quandary for President Trump, who doesn't want the United States to get embroiled in another war in the Middle East, even though he has embraced MBS as a close ally.
Mainstream conservatives have been left with an unfortunate quandary in the wake of last Thursday's congressional testimony from Christine Blasey Ford on allegations that Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh had sexually assaulted her in high school.
Where other documentaries make clear what side of the debate you should find yourself on when the credits start rolling, Eating Animals drops the moral quandary to sit heavy in the pit of the viewer's stomach.
The incident highlights a current quandary for school administrators across the country: how to uphold the First Amendment and ideals of free speech and expression while also protecting the community from hate speech and threats of violence.
With Islamic State losing ground in Iraq and Syria, hundreds of French citizens - and in some cases their children - have started to return to France, leaving the government in a quandary over how to deal with them.
The Senate returned her nomination to the White House without action, a sign that it was in trouble, but the White House resubmitted it in January, leaving the Senate in a quandary about whether to consider it.
The conjunction of art, technological innovation, and marketing presents a quandary for tech-fluent creatives: do you soldier on with your own independent work or do you manufacture varying degrees of future propaganda for corporations and governments?
And, just when we think things can't get more frenetic, we also find out that Richard is faced with a political quandary that could potentially ruin not only Christmas (not Christmas!), but also the fate of Aldovia.
Related: Meet the Artist Quilting Flaccid Pink AK-47s These Fonts Shred: A Typographical Survey of Heavy Metal Meet the Heavy Metal Chef Making Slayer Pizzas and the Danzig Burger A Bespoke Occult Glyph for Every Quandary
The "pink tax" Accessibility to menstrual hygiene products is a quandary men don't face, which brings us to the "pink tax," the extra money women pay for goods and services — despite the fact that we earn less.
But regardless of their first choice, lawmakers are facing pressure to choose sides in what has become an almost moral quandary for Republicans: whether they can tolerate Mr. Trump as the de facto head of the party.
Which is why the fascinating quandary of his career has been the question of how much he can tweak the country sound — how much sonic and thematic borrowing the genre can sustain — while still remaining identifiably country.
Pop the quandary into a search engine of your choice and you quickly find yourself drowning in a confusing slurry of poorly written step-by-step guides, most of which are technically inaccurate or just downright misleading.
However, what was perceived as a one-time hiccup in markets has turned out to be more of a perpetual issue — and the Fed is still pumping cash into the system today, months after the initial quandary.
The quandary is not just ethical but commercial (would you buy a car programmed to kill you under certain circumstances?), and it holds a mirror to the harsh decisions we, as humans, make but like to overlook.
But that does not make the political quandary any less torturous at a moment when the party's 2020 presidential primary is getting underway with more black and female candidates than have ever run for the White House.
The march presented the Kremlin with a quandary: either use force to break up the protest, and risk provoking more anger, or stand aside and let the demonstration take place, which risked revealing weakness to the Kremlin's opponents.
Sixteen years ago, during the close presidential race between George W. Bush and Al Gore, constitutional law professor James Raskin noticed a quandary: Thousands of Gore voters were "trapped" in Republican-controlled states where their votes were useless.
Founders and early investors are still going to get spectacularly rich, but late-comers and retail investors may find there's not much upside left unless the company can solve the quandary of serving a two-sided market profitably.
However, the terminology has been missing the past two meetings as the Fed has found itself in a quandary over whether it should continue down the path of normalizing interest rates after sitting near zero for seven years.
Of course, experts question whether tunnels are really an answer to the quandary of overcapacity, in addition to questioning Musk's claims that he can dig tunnels faster and at a fraction of the cost of traditional boring technology.
This story may be the opportunity Jay's been waiting for, but inside this riddle lies a moral quandary he never expected: a labyrinth into the evil in men's hearts that will shake the unsteady man to his foundations.
This quandary will only get deeper as popular arcade games like DDR come to market in both gambling and non-gambling versions—or if unethical arcade owners create a version that can switch from one to the other.
At the same time, European security services are in a quandary over how to handle the hundreds, possibly thousands, of young men who have gone to Syria to join ISIS, but come back claiming to disavow the group.
Each case presents the Supreme Court with a separation-of-powers quandary—how to adjudicate a dispute between branches of the federal government in Trump v Mazars; and between the president and state prosecutors in Trump v Vance.
But as money has been moving out of bonds and into these equities in search of income — dividend stocks are yielding 2.5 percent, nearly a point higher than 10-year Treasury notes — investors find themselves in a quandary.
It was nice a touch to have Troi immediately realize — without words — that Picard is in trouble because of her empathic abilities and for Riker to quickly deduce, without Picard telling him much, exactly what his quandary is.
But the current confrontation has presented a vexing quandary not only for Spain but the entire European Union, pitting demands for self-determination against the desire to preserve the sovereignty and territorial integrity of an important member state.
That quandary — and the many other difficulties of disarming a high-rise sniper — have informed how the New York Police Department is preparing for hundreds of thousands of people to gather in Times Square on New Year's Eve.
But here is a quandary I have encountered before when writing about liturgical music, notably in connection with the Gregorian chant boom of two decades ago: By what right does a music critic pass judgment on anyone's worship?
"The investment community remains in a quandary as the S&P 500 hits new highs alongside fund managers struggling with portfolio performance," wrote Tobias Levkovich, chief U.S. equities strategist at Citi, describing the variance in returns among market participants.
As we dive deeper into the warm-weathered, blossomy bliss of spring, we are faced with the same quandary that rolls around each May: What is the perfect gift for the person who gave you the gift of life?
I believe that this family loves their pig very much and that I am witnessing an unintentional act of animal cruelty, but I am in a quandary: Should I tell them that they are unwittingly mistreating their beloved pet?
Of course, transportation experts question whether tunnels are really an answer to the quandary of overcapacity, in addition to questioning Musk's claims that he can dig tunnels faster and at a fraction of the cost of traditional boring technology.
WASHINGTON – After striking an elusive nuclear deal with Iran, the Obama administration found itself in a quandary in early 2016: Iran had been promised access to its long-frozen overseas reserves, including $5.7 billion stuck in an Omani bank.
Pyongyang's claim to have tested a hydrogen bomb on Wednesday has put China, one of its few remaining allies, in a quandary as Beijing seeks to solidify its position as a global power without compromising the region's power balance.
Washington is 0-4 and now has a quarterback quandary — Case Keenum has been ineffective and exited Sunday's game in a walking boot, Dwayne Haskins didn't look ready in Week 4, and Colt McCoy is still recovering from injury.
Booth, the former Dallas Fed official, said the central bank is in a quandary of its own making, caused by easy policy that generated huge amounts of debt and overcapacity, where the economy created more than it could consume.
In addition to the political quandary of whether Rubio would even be able to mount a successful campaign, if he does decide to run he faces another more personal, and more awkward, dilemma: His good friend Florida Lt. Gov.
These days, now that visual art has become a prized commodity, this artistic disinheritance has become a not infrequent occurrence, the method of destruction of choice for 21st-century artists as well as an interesting moral and philosophical quandary.
Australia's emergence as the world's top LNG exporter has created a quandary for the conservative government, as methane and carbon emissions from gas and LNG production make it harder for the country to meet its greenhouse gas emission targets.
Uncle Sam can question him, tell him a story about how another president 20 years back had faced a similar quandary, wonder whether things could be better organized, tut, click and sigh, but Uncle Sam cannot command or forbid.
That's because the N.B.A. has always known that its efforts to cultivate a foothold in China, which began more than 30 years ago, exposed a league that has long championed social justice to precisely this sort of philosophical quandary.
The case in Miami also demonstrates the quandary confronting law enforcement agencies in the Trump era: They face both threats of punishment from the federal government for disregarding the wishes of immigration authorities, and legal challenges for heeding them.
My obsession with that particular quandary led me to Trisha Low's new book-length essay, Socialist Realism, in which she attempts to reconcile her desire for the comforts of love and home with her desire for a socialist utopia.
Its presence within a central node of the global art market, which has a deep investment in the status quo, aka white supremacy, had seemed to sum up so perfectly the quandary of the politically engaged — or citizen — artist.
Which leaves tiny Belgium with a special quandary: Arms sales are one of the major sources of jobs and income in one of its most blighted regions, Wallonia, where manufacturing has suffered from globalization, only to be replaced by narcotics trafficking.
"The real quandary now for the processed food industries is not just dialing back on salt, sugar and fat — which they're all doing — but figuring out ways to replace their ingredients with real stuff, like Brussels sprouts and broccoli," Moss says.
Keeping people alive Cord blood transplants in adults, still an option of last resort in the early 2000s, nearly slammed to a halt over the quandary of how to keep patients alive until their new bone marrow cells could kick in.
The quandary over what to buy is highlighted by the relationship between bond yields and dividend yields which has turned on its head and the gap is now at its widest in at least three decades, according to Thomson Reuters data.
To social conservatives, particularly evangelicals, the Stormy Daniels saga presents an ethical quandary: The president they've tasked with defending Christianity against the "secular left" allegedly cheated on his third wife, just months after she gave birth, with an adult film star.
It's kind of a quandary for use cases not starting with a green field, but Venzee, a startup that has been helping customers clean up their retail supply chain data to share with large vendors, thinks it has an answer.
But Russian firms find themselves in a quandary, caught between a desire to endorse the Kremlin line and back Maduro, and the fear that by doing so they could expose themselves to secondary U.S. sanctions which would harm their businesses.
One of the more satisfying questions probed by the show has less to do with untangling chronology and more with the quandary of making decisions and taking actions within and against a world dominated by stories and system of domination.
And ultimately, the film is not just a wild and nearly unbelievable story; it's a rumination on the lasting effects of sexual abuse, the complicated question of "good" lies, and the moral quandary that comes along with withholding painful information.
The plot — a looming conflict between the US and North Korea — is either poorly timed or extremely well-timed, given recent global events, but the real story is the classic moral quandary of how humans behave when trying to survive.
Lockheed Martin knows how to build spacecrafts, it's been doing it for decades, so to help solve this engineering quandary, the company held an internal contest among their engineers to generate ideas on how best to scoop up some Bennu.
"Target with Four Faces" exists in the same physical space that we do: it is a mute, damaged thing made of two distinct parts (four faces in niches set above a target), a figural presence infused into a nameless quandary.
Denmark faces a foreign policy quandary as it has to decide whether the pipeline can go through its territorial waters after it passed new legislation on pipelines allowing it to ban Nord Stream 2 on foreign policy and security grounds.
For example, it tries to resolve the quandary intersex people present to its version of Biblical literalism; after all, these people must have been created by God, and therefore, God himself does not always create firm distinctions between men and women.
The pitch for "Fear the Walking Dead" was always that it would show how civilization broke down to the point we see in the other show — where lawlessness is complete and even the most basic of choices presents a moral quandary.
As the fund turns its attention to Europe, European founders and investors will have to address whether taking Saudi money poses a moral quandary after the kingdom was linked to the brutal killing of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi in October.
That left them in a quandary of how to stall the measure without allowing Democrats to gloat that Republicans were so opposed to tighter gun restrictions that they defeated even a bill offered by a member of their own party.
About Phil's special quandary: It's the same as it was in the 1993 movie, one of the most unlikely high-concept rom-coms to become a popular hit, which was directed by Mr. Ramis and starred Bill Murray as Phil.
QUESTIONS PERSIST FOR GOLD FAVORITE Caster Semenya, the South African runner who became the unwilling face of the quandary over defining gender in sports and the favorite to win gold in the women's 800 meters, comfortably qualified for the semifinals.
The activist pointed out the key tension in this ethical quandary: the enlightening mission of cultural institutions in democratic societies on one hand, and the increasing budget cuts to the arts and pressure from the bottom line, on the other.
Your choice presents a quandary: A pile of white rice is an efficient vehicle for those strictly interested in mainlining their serving of sauce, but choosing it means forgoing the jollof rice, that mainstay of Nigerian — and much other African — cuisine.
The viewer is left to decide if Stanton knows that he hasn't yet overcome the inner demons that originally destroyed his relationship or if he no longer believes in the normative family structure — a quandary My Vibe flirts with at times.
Oyo layoffs, Airbnb's delayed IPO and the long-term quandary of investing in travel startups Europe's budget airline Norwegian Air has seen a nearly complete destruction of its market cap, declining in value 80% since the beginning of December 2019.
The vendors, known as manteros, epitomize a quandary facing the authorities: It is one thing to debate whether to allow more migrants into the European Union, but quite another to agree on what to do with them once they arrive.
For the Olcotts and families like them, who are not burdened by student loan debt and may be able to choose between offering liftoff through money instead of a childhood bedroom, Dr. Manzoni's study has the makings of a quandary.
However, CEOs of U.S. companies are in a quandary, added Sonnenfeld on "Squawk Box," as the first batch of 15% tariffs on another $300 billion worth of Chinese imports goes into effect Sunday, with the rest imposed on Dec. 15.
It has been substantially covered by the French news media for its rich symbolism and for the way it neatly sums up the ambiguity of France's policy toward the unceasing flow of migrants into Europe and the quandary they present.
If you need a reminder about what lead to this pivotal quandary, let me break down the salacious details for you: Ross and Rachel have a fight about Rachel working on their anniversary, and Ross's jealousy of her coworker, Mark.
In one astonishing document, written in 1783, he explained to his father that he faced a quandary with respect to an enslaved man named Billey, whom Madison had brought with him to Philadelphia as his manservant while he was in Congress.
But above all, in the view of many who have watched her up close, her record on Libya illustrates how, facing a national-security or foreign-policy quandary, she was inclined to act — in marked contrast to Mr. Obama's more reticent approach.
Amid talk of a formal split of the decades-old CDU-CSU alliance, on June 18th the Bavarians gave Mrs Merkel two weeks to come up with her preferred "European solution" to the secondary migration quandary—or risk that break if she failed.
San Francisco and New York (CNN Business)Facebook refused to remove a doctored video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last month, but this week the company faces a new quandary: Will it remove a fake video of its own CEO, Mark Zuckerberg?
"The ongoing policy quandary of 'what will it take to get the Fed to cut?' has been complicated by the gradual nature of the stock selloff which has kept equity volatility, and therefore the tightening in financial conditions, relatively tame," he added.
While the latter question couldn't technically apply to this year's 2018 Grammys — no matter who won Album Of The Year, we all know 2017 belonged to Lemonade – we were left pondering every other Beyoncé-related quandary going into Sunday night's award show.
Of course, transportation experts question whether tunnels are really an answer to the quandary of traffic congestion and overcapacity, in addition to questioning Musk's claims that he can dig tunnels faster and at a fraction of the cost of traditional boring technology.
At the height of the Greek financial crisis in 2011, the mostly middle-aged workers at Viome in the second city of Thessaloniki were faced with an existential quandary: The factory owners had gone bust, and the plant was about to shut down.
The election quandary for Ryan and his leadership team is this: They don't want to alienate moderate Republicans and independents who are repulsed by Trump's admission a decade ago that he had made unwanted sexual advances on a married woman and groped others.
The Closing the Bump Stock Loophole Act would solve the quandary of whether the bump-stock issue should be fixed by legislative or regulatory action by placing the ball in the ATF's court, Kildee said in an interview with Business Insider on Monday.
Now, those who survived face another round of recovery, physical and emotional — and the bureaucratic quandary of having to find or duplicate lost documents needed to gain access to the grants of about $1,900, a lot of money for a Nepalese homeowner.
The quandary over how to handle a precocious, hard-throwing pitcher is a familiar one for the Yankees, who 10 years ago devised the so-called Joba Rules, guidelines for how to deal with Joba Chamberlain, who was then a prized pitching prospect.
But federal law, as well as some state laws, fails to specify protocols for temporary transfer of firearms, and that leaves gun retailers in a quandary over the proper steps to take when returning temporarily stored firearms, Runyan and colleagues had previously found.
I have now spent more time looking at Ken Okiishi's iPhone photographs, which are included in the video "Being and/or Time" (2013-5718), on view at Reena Spaulings, than I have with my own smartphone photographs — leading to a minor existential quandary.
Experts and activists said the dispute was a vivid reminder of a quandary that Vietnam has wrestled with for decades: how to allocate land in a Communist country that allows quasi-private ownership rights but still considers all land to be state property.
The story reached a worldwide audience and forced the president's wife to surrender the house, presenting the Mexican government with the sort of ethical quandary that in a different country might result in a congressional inquiry or the appointment of an independent prosecutor.
However, other figures on Thursday suggest that for now consumers are continuing to spend and to borrow heavily, placing the Bank of England in a quandary as it considers whether it will need to cut rates for a second time this year.
McConnell's anger – and the difficulty he felt responding to the leader of his party – highlights the quandary facing many Republicans in the aftermath of Trump's comments blaming "both sides" for violence that ended in the death of 32-year-old Heather Heyer.
But the adulation we heap upon billionaires obscures the plain moral quandary at the center of their wealth: Why should anyone have a billion dollars, why should anyone be proud to brandish their billions, when there is so much suffering in the world?
But, when it comes to school segregation, he has been stymied by the same quandary that previous mayors faced: How to redistribute resources so that black and Hispanic students have more access to high-quality schools without alienating middle class, white families.
Not likely, said Carpenter, but he added that the selloff put the Fed in the quandary of determining whether the sudden market wobbliness is more important to policy than the recently passed tax cuts or an expected rise in U.S. government deficits.
The fact is Trump raised valid questions about Clinton's foreign policy positions, fund-raising practices and email quandary -- but he did so in his vintage over-the-top fashion, with so many personal insults that many will ignore or forget the substance of his criticism.
It has put the NFL — already facing other challenges, including a concussion crisis that could impact the way the sport is played at a fundamental level — in an almost impossible quandary that appears far from resolution with the regular season opener just days away.
The big North American team sports—baseball, basketball, gridiron football and ice hockey—have resolved this quandary by forming closed circuits of around 30 teams, which cannot be relegated no matter how poorly they perform and have no higher league for which to qualify.
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Tim Scott faced a quandary on Saturday in hosting his town hall: he promised to meet with his South Carolina constituents, but he wanted to avoid the kind of adversarial free-for-all so many Republicans encountered this week.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The sugar rush that President Donald Trump's tax cuts and fiscal stimulus injected into the U.S. economy poses a quandary for the Federal Reserve and its chairman, Jerome Powell, in their campaign to raise interest rates: where and when to stop?
Inside the Pentagon, the quandary is known as the Terminator conundrum, and there is no consensus about whether the United States should seek international treaties to try to ban the creation of those weapons, or build its own to match those its enemies might create.
WASHINGTON — Just a few blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House sits the Trump International Hotel, one of the newest luxury additions to President-elect Donald J. Trump's real estate empire, and perhaps the most visible symbol of the ethical quandary he now confronts.
He urged Asian nations to avoid investment offers from China and to choose instead a "better option" — working with the United States — which, he said, would not saddle them with debt, a quandary some countries are facing as a result of their partnerships with Beijing.
But if those tools can't break into the phones — perhaps because the devices are damaged or misconfigured — then the bureau faces a quandary: Apple wouldn't be able to break into the phones either, because of changes it has made to its mobile operating system.
Lawmakers have ideas The Moonves #MeToo merger catalyst With clock ticking faster on its cases, the SEC faces a quandary As they report second-quarter earnings, they are going out of their way to let their shareholders know that it is customers who are paying.
As his nation's misery came to infect the rest of southern Africa, Mr. Mugabe offered other African leaders a quandary: How could they oppose his policies or pressure him toward change without being seen by their own followers as traitors to the anticolonial cause?
Mr. Jibril's sermons demonstrate YouTube's quandary because he "does not explicitly call to violent jihad, but supports individual foreign fighters and justifies the Syrian conflict in highly emotive terms," according to a report by the International Center for the Study of Radicalization and Political Violence.
The surprisingly close Republican contest foreshadowed Mr. Gillespie's quandary heading into the general election: how to handle a president who remains broadly popular on the right but is politically toxic among the broader electorate in Virginia, the only Southern state carried by Hillary Clinton.
My quandary is that I am certain he feels a lot of pain, regret and sadness, and although I no longer love him, I feel a bond of parenthood with him, and in the best world I would want him to know how they are.
Throughout the film, he and the other members of his illicit organization, Ken (Brendan Gleeson) and Harry (Ralph Fiennes) talk, drink, and shoot their way through the quandary of whether one can ever be forgiven for such a crime, even if it's an accident.
One reason that I have misgivings about what's been called ''quandary ethics'' — ethics conceived of as solving puzzles like these — is that, as in this case, it can be close to impossible to calculate the costs and benefits of the various outcomes you consider.
A decade after The Omnivore's Dilemma planted a stake in the vast middle ground between carnivore and vegan, the quandary of what to eat for dinner hasn't gotten any simpler — and neither has the quest for the right word to describe the ethical moderate.
The idea, promoted by Prime Minister Manuel Valls, a Socialist with a conservative twitch, has struck at the core of France's ideals of the rights of citizens, while underscoring the quandary the government faces as it confronts a widening threat from terrorists born and raised in France.
The chemicals sector's quandary is more acute than most industries' because of its dense web of regulations, but it is also emblematic of problems facing several other trades that rely on some kind of "passporting" system to operate across the EU, like financial services and haulage.
And while there's obviously a knee-jerk negative reaction to the notion of some government agency recording everything we see and hear, the movie centers itself around a detective that demonstrably puts the technology to good use, rationalizing away the inherent moral quandary of its own premise.
He said it poses a particular quandary for naturalized citizens with accents because ICE agents may believe they are in the U.S. illegally and not afford them the rights of Americans, including due process, access to a lawyer and leaving their homes without proof of citizenship.
On Tuesday night's episode — a vehicle that served mainly to get the family back in a mansion that isn't a pile of burnt rubble — Mickey finds herself in perhaps her biggest moral and ethical quandary to date when she's propositioned by a 100-year-old woman.
For most of us regular people, when a hair quandary arises, we turn to our closest posse of lady friends to draw upon their knowledgable advice and answer age-old beauty questions, such as blonde or brunette, long or short, and middle part or to the side?
Whew." Elsewhere, this is what the cast had to say about some other big moments:  In the episode, Abby was confronted with a moral quandary: Should she tell the president about Cyrus' ties to Vargas and make a play for his job or be a "better person?
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads DENVER — Most of the time, exhibitions either provide an opportunity to enrich through juxtaposition our understanding of a selection of artworks, or they propose a set of criteria for thinking through an art historical, social, political, psychological, or aesthetic quandary.
After a morning where Christine Blasey Ford by a general consensus, shared even by Fox News anchors, gave credible testimony supporting her allegation of sexual assault, Republican politicians were left with the quandary of how this should affect their support of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.
Policy Puzzle The quandary facing the Federal Reserve this summer is the same as it was back in the spring, and winter, and last fall: By traditional guideposts like the unemployment rate, it looks as if it is time for the Fed to be raising interest rates.
Yet while some Patriots fans told me that the team's associations with Trump are a real moral quandary, others brushed them off, noting that many of the team's members — including Brady — opted not to visit the White House in protest after their 2017 Super Bowl win.
David Miller, a former intelligence analyst working for the Defense Intelligence Agency who studied Weiss' work as part of an intellectual history of the National Security Council, told me that Weiss transformed this quandary into an economic problem, one that brought him back to his graduate studies.
At the same time, one of Boggs's more open-minded white colleagues, Denny Rakestraw, is caught in a dangerous quandary when he discovers that his wife has been keeping a record of "Negro sightings" in the area and collecting money from neighbors to buy out the newcomers.
The questions from voters on display this weekend at a series of town-hall-style meetings in Wisconsin's Fifth Congressional District, many of which were focused on the future of the health care law, underscored the quandary many lawmakers are facing even in solidly Republican districts.
A sense of moral quandary, of genuine cause-and-effect, is the most prominent example, with thoughtful developers making us ponder that maybe—just maybe—gunning down hundreds of human beings, or even just being a bit of a dick to someone, shouldn't be a decision taken lightly.
The advertisement showcases a debutante-like woman, with her pearls and crinoline-lined dress, talking about the huge poop she just did and the quandary over what to do about the smell that lingers after you have a massive bowel movement at work or at your boyfriend's house.
This status presented a quandary: the not-soundbite-friendly Lonergan and the mumbly Affleck, who made a whole film about his contempt for the media, were truly not the ideal guys to sell the picture, when there was an A-list actor ready to testify to its greatness.
If a handful of trans women fare better in elite women's events than they did in men's—suggesting that they have maintained an unusually large athletic advantage, even after hormone therapy—then sports administrators could find that the testosterone threshold creates a bigger quandary than chromosome tests did.
Searing summer temperatures rising to record levels in parts of Europe highlight a quandary facing the continent: how to phase out the fossil fuels driving global warming, while avoiding power shortfalls in an era when there could be increasing spikes in demand from cooling systems and expanding data centres.
The quandary is that on the one hand, kids will say their mom is always asking them questions such as who are they texting, but on the other hand, they'll say their mom never wants to know what's going on in their lives and never listens, said Acuña.
In the immediate aftermath of last year's election—before anyone could know for sure  how thuggishly the Trump transition would conduct itself, or how resistant the president-elect would be to running the government in the public interest—large swaths of the conservative professional class faced a moral quandary.
The California Republican, however, has not ruled out what many suspect: That the ultimate source was the Trump White House itself, and this was, to use a Trumpian phrase, a ruse to help the president extricate himself from the Twitter-induced quandary created by his allegation against Obama.
Now it is set to reopen on June 23 in a new incarnation downtown, after institutional introspection compelled not only by the move but also by the presiding quandary about what, exactly, defines photography today as the medium keeps morphing and mutating within a vast, evolving technological landscape.
Searing summer temperatures rising to record levels in parts of Europe highlight a quandary facing the continent: how to phase out the fossil fuels driving global warming, while avoiding power shortfalls in an era when there could be increasing spikes in demand from cooling systems and expanding data centers.
Lower East Side, Manhattan For Jews who observe the Sabbath and holidays like Passover, living in a high-rise building poses a quandary: How do you get to the 23rd floor without pressing the elevator button, a task that would violate a prohibition against creating sparks and fires?
Men are more violent than women, a fact we are prone to invoking not as a statistic but either meekly, as a quandary, or gravely, as a judgment; at a time of viral outrage like the #MeToo moment, we may sense gradations but are afraid to be labeled apologists.
The quandary, some Republicans acknowledge, is that the party's leaders are constrained from fully grappling with the damage Mr. Trump inflicted with those voters, because he remains popular with the party's core supporters and with the conservatives who will dominate the caucus even more in the next Congress.
In a 2016 letter to one of the prosecutors, Fritz Clapp, a lawyer for the Diciples, said that if the government gained ownership of the trademark, it would face a quandary because owners must periodically demonstrate that the mark is still in active use for the purpose registered.
The confusion put En Marche leaders in a quandary over whether to show deference to an internationally known and once-powerful political figure, while asserting themselves as a new generation determined to scrap the sort of customs and deals that perpetuated the country's elite and alienated many voters.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who, during his presidential campaign, said he wanted to be the leader "who built a peaceful relationship" between the two Koreas, will face a quandary of catastrophic proportions should a member of the North Korean contingent decide to defect to the South.
There was, however, a bit of a catch: The ruling clarified Aboriginal title rights but only created guidelines for negotiations over disputes, leaving the fate of any contention among the federal government, elected tribal leadership and hereditary chiefs — the exact quandary surrounding the current Coastal GasLink standoff — legally murky.
Glen — much like the protagonists of C.K.'s other projects — is a stand-in for C.K. Particularly since his art tends to delve supremely into the personal, it's C.K.'s parallel to his own character that puts him in the arch of the evergreen quandary of considering art separate from artist.
They may yet face a similar quandary in the Sea of Azov, off Crimea, where Russia is trying to close Ukrainian ports and prompting Kiev to look westward for support—at the same time as Moscow builds up its troops and missiles in Kaliningrad, its enclave between Poland and Lithuania.
To aid in that process, new research — published Thursday in the journal Science — has tackled the difficult question of how the public actually feels driverless cars should behave when such an ethical quandary is presented — and how the vehicle's programming might affect its willingness to actually drive around in one.
That's the kind of hard-hitting ethical quandary you probably wouldn't expect from Silicon Valley, but the teaser for the forthcoming season of HBO's tech startup satire promises to at least touch upon big names like Google and Amazon, even if it's just for a scathing joke (what is Amazon, anyway?).
"Homecoming" is a familiar quandary for any creative raised outside of America's major cities; it's a complicated ode to Chicago that finds him feeling guilt for having to leave in order to realize his dreams, though he finds comfort in the fact that he'll always be tied to the city.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads In comparing Jean Dubuffet's early paintings from the 1950s with recently resurrected works by American color-field painter Larry Poons from the late '80s and '90s, there is a quandary that appears somewhat daunting, especially given the relative, though pronounced, cultural differences between them.
Even amid difficult relations on many issues, the US and Chinese governments can turn their H7N9 quandary into a joint effort to steer global sample sharing away from decline and fragmentation and towards protecting communities all over the world from being, as a century ago, helpless when virulent influenza strikes again.
" Fran recalls the quandary of a woman with weakened wrists who, after a minor stroke, died abandoned in her bathroom because she was unable to open the door to call for help: "If she'd had a lever-type doorknob instead of an old-fashioned screw doorknob, she'd be alive today.
Now, however, the marketing industry is facing a moral quandary in the face of a national debate over the role that fake news played in the presidential election and the realization that many websites that promote false and misleading stories are motivated by the money they can make from online advertising.
Though I have lived in the United States for about 34 years, I have never come close to solving this mess, and the question of what to do, how to remake myself every day to escape being swallowed up by this quandary is a question that clearly plagues other immigrants to this country.
That quandary presents a moral issue for large-scale international brands that value their business overseas: Do they want to sell in China, which has strict guidelines that make animal testing a hard and fast rule, or do they want to preserve their cruelty-free status and the customers who cherish that?
MANILA — Military and diplomatic officials in the Philippines were facing a quandary on Thursday after President Rodrigo Duterte distanced the country further from the United States, its biggest defense ally, by saying he would end joint military exercises like one scheduled for next week and would pursue closer ties to China and Russia.
If you take them out of the contexts in which they were once said and instead apply them to The Hills as a whole, you somehow fall into an existential quandary that will plague the supposed "reality" show from now until it's officially erased from our cultural consciousness: Was it real or fake?
Throughout the film, Churchill and a few others struggle with whether it's okay to fudge the truth in order to bolster the spirits of the population, a quandary made concrete in a radio address from Churchill to the nation that plainly misrepresents the facts of the war for reasons of public morale.
John BoehnerJohn Andrew BoehnerLobbyists race to cash in on cannabis boom Rising star Ratcliffe faces battle to become Trump's intel chief This little engine delivers results for DC children MORE (R-Ohio) faced a similar quandary as Ryan's predecessor, and it was one of the factors that eventually drove him to retirement. Rep.
Whether to stay the course and hope for the best, even as major participants drop out, or to call a "rainout" and cancel the event, potentially at the last minute, is a quandary facing businesses, city leaders and conference organizers and it often involves more than a simple financial cost-benefit analysis.
So the Garage Museum of Contemporary Art faced a certain quandary as it took on the challenge of assembling the first representative sample of contemporary art today in Russia — did it have to be a traditional geographic catalog, or would some other criterion work for a country that covers 231 time zones.
So while Francis is not exactly flinging open the faith's doors to "sinners," his attempts to decentralize the church and become the "pope of the people" shows the quandary Catholicism is in today—where a fear of progression is at odds with the reality that, without modernization, Catholicism will continue its slow but steady decline.
For Apple, which prides itself on providing one unified iPhone device worldwide, the disintegration of the monopoly around GPS presents a quandary: Does it offer a unique device for the Chinese market capable of handling Beidou, or does it add Beidou chips to its phones worldwide and run into trouble with U.S. national security authorities?
It was a visit that even his supporters considered an unforced error as it potentially put him in a moral quandary not entirely unlike that of Pope Pius XII, whose reputation forever suffered for his calculation that speaking out against the genocide of Jews during World War II would risk the lives of Catholics.
Fernand Amandi, a Democratic pollster and podcast host based in Miami, addressed the party's Latino quandary in a December interview with The Associated Press: The question is not are Democrats winning the Hispanic vote — it's why aren't Democrats winning the Hispanic vote 80-20 or 90-10 the way they are winning black voters?
Letter To the Editor: "A Refuge for Orangutans Presents a Quandary for Environmentalists" (Salat Island Journal, April 26) captures a balancing point in Indonesia's effort to preserve its environment while providing a versatile and environmentally efficient consumer item and ensuring a sustainable livelihood for the 15 million Indonesians employed in the palm oil industry.
During his unofficial run for the governorship, Chuck has learned quickly about the value of trading favors, but it puts him in a quandary with men like Jack Foley, who want their own favors granted but also need him to pass a "stress test" to see if he can survive attacks on his past.
The quandary is played out across nearly three hours and a bewildering array of styles that tilt at times in the direction of Noël Coward, J. B. Priestley and flat-out farce, Mr. Head reaching a nadir of sorts when he is required for comic effect to bang his head in disbelief against the wall.
The fate of the Belfast Project turns out to be an absorbing drama in its own right, as Keefe delicately unpacks the legal and moral quandary surrounding what amounts to a cache of confessions — conducted at considerable risk and in utmost secrecy — in which people implicated themselves and others in the cruelest, most brutal acts.
The deal, which is clearly an experiment, reflects the quandary facing TV executives today: As more and more people stop paying for traditional TV, professional sports leagues and their broadcast partners are trying to figure out how to translate great TV content, like live sports, to places that aren't television, like Twitter, Facebook, Amazon, and Google.
Sources have told Reuters that Guo is also suffering from cancer and the military had faced a quandary over whether to put him on trial, in case he died before reaching court, like former comrade Xu. Serving and retired officers have said graft in the armed forces is so pervasive it could undermine China's ability to wage war.
And it's put mainstream Republicans in a quandary of their own making: While Trump has taken their arguments a step too far, from delegitimizing liberal rule to delegitimizing democracy in a far more basic way, Republicans like House Speaker Paul Ryan have a stake in allowing Trump to undermine Clinton's legitimacy in advance of her inauguration.
Every time I read the cumbersome phrase "the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan which is not recognized by the United States as a state and is known as the Taliban," my daughter stifled a laugh because — at age eight — she understands that an agreement with an entity that we as a nation do not recognize presents a metaphysical quandary.
So, in a quandary familiar to many adults who must soon dispose of the beloved stuff their parents would love them to inherit, Ms. Beauregard has to break it to her mother that she does not intend to keep the Hitchcock dining room set or the buffet full of matching Lenox dinnerware, saucers and gravy boats.
But grocers still face a quandary: how to maintain a huge store whose center is filled with items that are largely out of step with how we eat today, yet are a steady source of slotting fees (to secure the best spots in the store when a product is introduced) and other payments from the companies that produce them.
Sunday was a day of intense maneuvering on all sides, with an elation among many Israelis that the rancorous relations with the Obama administration were over — but with questions about just how far or how quickly Mr. Trump would go on moving the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, a quandary that has bedeviled American presidents for decades.
It is the first time in Germany's postwar history that a party represented in the federal Parliament has elicited such intense scrutiny, and it points to an uneasy quandary facing the country's institutions: What to do with a party that is at once considered a danger to democracy and that is gaining in popularity in parts of the country?
Trump's move to unilaterally end the crisis could solve the most pressing immigration quandary for congressional Republicans, but the House GOP would still have no clear solution to protect "Dreamers" who came to the United States illegally as children and face possible deportation after Trump rescinded an Obama-era program that allows them to work and live in the country.
That openness laid the groundwork for the music he'd release as an adult, but it also helped link Wayne's narrative to young black teenagers across the country who were trapped in the quandary of contributing to their family's well-being and still trying to maintain being a kid, all while broader society strips them of their innocence with the perception of inherent guilt.
Through repetition of the same argument, and by virtue of America's vast military power and economic wealth, the foreign policy establishment in general terms has been conditioned to believe there is no quandary the U.S. can't solve with our military, or any bully that the U.S. can't knock back (the question of what comes next is rarely asked these days).
But now Mr. Kurz, 603, who took office last year as part of a wave of populist leaders propelled to power on anti-migration platforms, is among those forcing the European Union to confront a stark quandary: Can it maintain one of its most cherished principles — open borders among its members — and still provide citizens with a sense of security and identity?
Seth Masket, a professor of political science at the University of Denver, summarized the quandary facing members of Congress in a polarized nation: Republicans in particular represent much more conservative districts than they used to, and they risk offending a much more active and ideologically demanding group of activists in primary elections should they be seen working with Democrats or undermining President Trump.
Thinking about this quandary sent me back for a second look at a book I'd read about a year back; the connection might be easier to understand when you realize that the German word translated as "ego" in the title of Max Stirner's The Ego and His Own really means "unique": the title could be literally translated as The Unique One and His Own.
America faces a much more normal sort of policy quandary, to which the ideal political response could reach the destination that Salam proposes in his essay — sharper limits on low-skilled migration and a more Canadian or Australian approach to immigration as, effectively, recruitment  — without huge and wrenching shifts, mass deportations, religion-specific entry bans, and all the rest of the Trumpian bill of goods.
At a time when the percentage of the nation's schools that are overwhelmingly populated by the poor and racial minorities is climbing, Cleveland is wrestling with a quandary quite different from one it faced during the days of legal segregation: Should it fight to maintain the modicum of integration it has achieved, which has kept whites in the district while leaving many blacks in all-black schools?
"It's hard to know how much you DO kind of pick up on?" she trails off, perhaps leaving this quandary open-ended forever… As the ladies prep for the rose ceremony, Amanda dares to talk about her children, prompting a royal fuckup from Olivia: "It's like an episode of Teen Mom," she mutters not once but twice, potentially digging her own rose-petaled grave.
Interviews with 16 current and former administration officials, immigration experts, and close White House advisers reveal a potentially thorny political quandary for the president: how to balance promises to his base, which favors a tough approach to border security, with efforts to appeal to moderate, independent, and suburban voters who may be turned off by visual images of immigrant parents separated from their kids.
On the same day that the Trump Organization announced its appointment of two ethics monitors to advise on potential conflicts of interest, it faced a new ethical quandary: Is it right to double the price of the initiation fee at Mar-a-Lago, the Trump family's private club in Florida, or would that be seen as cashing in on President Trump's arrival in the White House?
For then-Captain Parker of the Second Force Reconnaissance Company, the opening experience became "seven months of blood and fire and broken glass," a life of fighting "in the homes of our enemies, among their families" and then, back in the safety of the United States, the startling and yet woefully common quandary of being unsure how to share with a loved one a particular memory.
The end of the criminal case against Mr. Elam, 30, could pose a quandary for lawyers from the law firm K&L Gates's Cyber Civil Rights Legal Project, which has been providing legal representation to the woman and others who are say they are victims of "revenge porn" — a type of online harassment that occurs when former lovers or hackers post sexually explicit images of people online without their permission.
Here are our best picks for the best sleeping bags you can buy:Best overall: Hyke & Byke Quandary 15 Degree sleeping bagBest for extreme cold: Mountain Hardware Lamina Z BonfireBest for a budget: Coleman North Rim Extreme WeatherBest for casual comfort: Teton Sports FahrenheitBest for couples: Sleepingo Double Sleeping BagThe best camping cookware you can buyA great set of camping cookware brings the comfort of the kitchen to the campsite.
Here's how The Verge's Casey Newton described Google+'s quandary in 2014: Nearly three and a half years after opening its doors the public, you would be hard pressed to name a single person who ever became famous because of a following they built on Google+; to name a news story that broke there first; or to identify a way that it meaningfully differentiated itself from the glut of social products on the market.
It was worse when the skies declined to provide snow, leaving the organizers of the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival with an image problem — the "Adirondacks' coolest place," draped in dead grass and mud — and a quandary: Assuming they could find enough snow to truck into town, should it go to the Ice Palace, where a mixture of water and snow is used to cement the blocks together, or the arctic mini-golf course, whose obstacles are built entirely of snow?
But gender is a category included on countless forms, from car rentals to chiropractic offices, and newly legal non-binary people can find themselves in a quandary — forced to choose an often-mandatory gender that doesn't match the one on their ID. "Everything from employment to health to national, state, and government forms of identification to travel all require someone checking a box for gender/sex," Nina Kossoff, creator of the non-binary health and wellness resource project Thems Health, told VICE on Wednesday.
It truly is a spectacular, bizarre, once in a lifetime piece of work from Lopez, a dude breaking his personal box open, athletically and skill wise, and slamming a hot one down, like the proverbial New England Donut into coffee—I, personally, almost certainly would have written about it even if it, didn't end up injuring a dude and posing a philosophical quandary—but here we are, sitting in the wake of this dunk's destruction, counting the human cost, and wondering… was that baller ass dunk really worth it?

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