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The current issue of the Weekly Standard contains two articles which lay bare this basic truth.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Grimmacing to victory, grinning to defeat
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Even moments like the one Alec describes serve to further the depth of the game, to lay bare its mysteries and miseries.
FORBES: 'Dishonored' Review - Part One: The Wonders Of Exploration And Player Choice
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Shadow chancellor George Osborne has said the Budget, expected to confirm a likely 3% fall in growth in 2009, will "lay bare" Labour's economic failings.
BBC: Recession an opportunity, says PM
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Another was Maria Monk's "Awful Disclosures, " a sensational penny-dreadful which pretended to lay bare the secrets of the lurid life behind the walls of a 19th century convent.
WSJ: Alan Bradley on Writing About an England He'd Never Seen | Traveler's Tale
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The French elections lay bare the fault lines.
BBC: Europe: Things fall apart
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Two years later, at a conference at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, he laid the foundations of his reputation in America with a bold new way to approach literary texts and lay bare their ideological presuppositions.
ECONOMIST: Obituary
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But their main job should be to lay bare the underlying, unacceptable and deliberately obscured proposition: If ratified, this treaty will implicate the Senate in a radical, wooly-headed disarmament agenda that has at its core the unilateral denuclearization of the United States through the unchecked atrophying of its arsenal.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: The President's new clothes
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She says her songs, particularly "Alas, I Cannot Swim", lay bare her fantasies about a normal way of life what she calls "a particular formula for living" that she missed by hitting the road at such a young age, and her insecurities about having left school before she finished.
NPR: British Invasion: Laura Marling's Fearless Folk
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Young Germans neither wish to conceal the past nor share their parents' eagerness to lay it bare.
ECONOMIST: Nazi war crimes
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He doubled back toward Cambridge on a roundabout and pulled into a lay-by off the highway, a place of oily, littered grass with a kiosk on worn bare ground which sold hot dogs and burgers to lorry drivers.
NEWYORKER: Hand on the Shoulder