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The constraints on New York's schools chancellor are so great that the job may be well-nigh impossible.
ECONOMIST: New York��s schools
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Maximum pressure combined with minimum stress produces passion, and passionate organizations full of passionate people will accomplish well-nigh anything.
FORBES: Job One for Leaders
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But in a rapidly fragmenting currency area, it is well-nigh impossible.
ECONOMIST: Central banks (1): When the chips are down | The
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He was invaluable in devising and delivering the well-nigh invisible barbs that eventually brought down Oskar Lafontaine, the chancellor's leftist rival, as finance minister and chairman of the Social Democratic Party.
ECONOMIST: Germany��s new man for the Balkans
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Yet, if France gets in with a deficit of 3.3%, it will be well-nigh impossible to keep out Italy, which will have a deficit in the same range or perhaps even less.
ECONOMIST: Ever closer to euro-fudge | The
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The liberal conversation has exactly the same limits: the impulse to see conservative causes as payoffs to interest groups and conservative political successes as demonstrations of structural flaws in the political system is well-nigh irresistible.
NEWYORKER: Evening the Odds
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They know that politically, the NHS is well nigh untouchable - and that if you are going to dare suggest it needs a prod and a poke if not a good makeover, you'd better be ready to prepare the ground with a liberal dose of praise for NHS staff first.
BBC: What you think of reshaping the NHS
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The hi-fi is well nigh amazing, regardless of whether the top is up or down.
WSJ: 2013 Mercedes-Benz SL550 Review: The Beauty Is All on the Inside | Rumble Seat by Dan Neil
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Meanwhile, in Germany, about 12.5% of Germans who are civil employees or above a certain income opt out of the public system altogether and rely solely on private coverage--even though they know it is well nigh impossible to return to the public system once they switch.
FORBES: Uncommon Sense
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But even assuming everything goes well for Mr Bush, several things will make this nigh-impossible.
ECONOMIST: Holding the line? | The