(Well, no paraphrasing necessary here, apparently, other than pointing out that the clinical psychologist certainly knows his trade – the trade of a sawbones as they used to call doctors in general – and he certainly cut it to the bones on this one when he likened the plight of a businessman losing his fortune to feelings of being "cut down at the knees".)
2. In a bid to spur economic development in its downtown area, the city of Springfield, Mo., has set up a free Wi-Fi network using four BelAir 200 multiswitch service routers.…
Service providers in many U.S. cities are concerned that the addition of new, free hot spots and hot zones, underwritten and pushed by municipalities, could undercut their broadband services revenues.
"We were expecting to becut down at the knees (slaughtered, destroyed, heavily defeated) by opponents, but were not," Brewer said in a telephone interview, noting that he and others in the city put together a "very careful" campaign to make sure the service was not a direct threat to services offered by SBC or other providers. Part of what makes the Wi-Fi service acceptable to SBC is that users get only one hour of free access, and they are primarily transient students.
3. Harrington did not answer a question about how things would have changed for García if the putt had gone in. But his reply gave much insight into his own views on the difference between winning and losing. And he knows his subject matter. Not long after turning professional in 1995, he won the Peugeot Open de España. Between that win in 1996 and his second victory four years later, he finished second 17 times. He has 30 runner-up finishes as a professional.
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