Why can't we just make do with the stem cell lines that already exist, they ask?
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In the very best traditions of make do and bodging that the country is known for.
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Special forces leaders in Afghanistan and embassies in terror-sponsoring states will just have to make do.
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Make do with what you have, if not less, may well be the new political mantra.
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Both communities now make do with inadequate and polluting diesel generators that operate sporadically, the UN says.
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Soldiers today make do with anything that will change their appearance, from Halloween masks to shower caps.
It has around 191, 000 employees, while similar companies elsewhere make do with a third of that number.
Lacking the make-believe royalty of Hollywood, the Nobel Foundation has to make do with the real thing.
If meat is not available, says one Friday prayer leader, people should make do with traditional egg soup.
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But they have since had to make do with second best behind Armstrong and the US Postal train.
In the absence of such a bank the world will have to make do with the current system.
Otherwise, you'll have to make do with the demo video after the break.
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Over the years, people learned how to handle it and even make do.
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Mr Wakefield said they were having to make do with what they had.
Like many Americans, we'll simply have to learn to make do with less.
Many Latinos still feed their pets table scraps: three-quarters of Mexican hounds make do with leftover bits of burrito.
After two centuries of spartan innovation, the U.S. Marines have learned how to make do with whatever is available.
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Meanwhile, the poorest 20% of the population must make do with only 2.8% of the wealth, down from 4%.
The Blues had to make do with three penalties from full-back Ben Blair.
So they make do with storing contacts and inventories in the heads of managers who might quit at any time.
Kurtenbach was friends with the university's wrestling coach, who complained he was forced to make do with a basketball scoreboard.
But the Pharoahs will have to make do with a patched up strike force to beat Malawi away on Saturday.
But the Navy should perhaps make do with two large carriers: they might be more cost-effective than three small ones.
She came within a second of a medal in the women's lightweight sculls but had to make do with fourth place.
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Most of last winter the country's second city, Ganje, had to make do with only two hours of electricity a day.
Despite plenty of possession, they were unable to break down the Wasps defence and had to make do with Davis's kicks.
The rest have to make do with a quick swipe across the knee with a scalpel, to mimic a surgery scar.
Fans of the show have had to make do with repeats since it was pulled, which have continued to draw big audiences.
For the most part, I make do with a couple of battered, lightweight pots, some utensils and a few plates and bowls.
As it is, the studio will have to make do with regular ticket prices for the announced two-week run of the film.
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