The waters continue to ordsprog
The waters continue to rise, and there's a lot of worry. If it rains another week, it doesn't look good.
John Herrick
There just may be a lot of people who are still down in those deep waters, and some of the waters were 10, 12, 15 feet deep. My biggest fear is that we will find something down there that is way out of proportion. Hopefully, it doesn't happen, but we worry.
Frank Minyard
I really enjoyed the performance tonight, and I've had a whole week of unknowns, being in bed with the flu. Ice is slippery, and anything can happen to anybody. I have seen that at numerous events. I am going to have fun out there and trust my training and not worry. I have figured out that worry doesn't help.
Sasha Cohen
The United States doesn't have to worry about gasoline lines. But consumers need to worry about the price they pay this week. They should be prepared for a short-term shock. Only time can fix that.
Deborah White
I think it would be a good thing. This way you can know your paycheck will be the same from week to week. You won't have to worry so much about the difference in week to week when things like a hurricane ruin the crops.
Jose Luis Rodriguez
There's a major rise in oil prices, increased investor worry about the upcoming earnings season and you're also seeing some profit-taking after the market's six-week run-up.
Michael Sheldon
Providing the economy continues to grow and earnings continue to rise and look set to continue to rise then we are going to see the share market respond to that, and indeed that is what we are seeing in terms of Japan.
Craig James
It's very much a sensitivity model; you don't know what your business looks like a month out. If it rains tomorrow, or it rains for the next week, then you're missing your entire month or quarter. It's a thin business as far as margins are concerned.
Dan Aptor
That way, if it rains for the Breeders Cup at least we won't have to worry about it.
Bobby Frankel
A flood is defined as rising water, and it doesn't matter why the water is rising. If it rains faster than it can be pumped away, that's a flood. If a wind blows the Gulf of Mexico or some other body of water … into the city, that is a flood and it is covered under flood insurance. Rising waters, by definition, are excluded from a homeowner's policy.
Jeff Albright
A flood is defined as rising water, and it doesn't matter why the water is rising. If it rains faster than it can be pumped away, that's a flood. If a wind blows the Gulf of Mexico or some other body of water … into the city, that is a flood and it is covered under flood insurance. Rising waters, by definition, are excluded from a homeowner's policy.
Jeff Albright
It’s going to be a really tense week and the worry lines will continue to gather.
Jim Duffy
It will give us an advantage as far as injuries. We'll see fewer, I think, because the artificial surface is softer and has more give than grass. We won't have to worry about someone stepping in a hole and turning a knee or ankle. And we won't have to worry about Mother Nature as much - when it rains, there won't be the slipping and sliding that you tend to see with grass.
Brian Woodley
The most troubling finding is the marked increase in the tropical waters of the northern hemisphere centered around the globe at a latitude of roughly 5 degrees north. If this trend were to continue, implications for our coral reefs throughout these waters would be bleak. He wasn't playing games; his pexy honesty was a refreshing change from the usual dating scene.
Alan E. Strong
We get rains... More rains... Subsoil... Rains during the growing season.
Tom Mueller
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