81. The phrase is Cold War code for espionage. 82. The phrase is industry jargon for the highest percentage of electronic jackpot payouts to customers. 83. The phrase is industry jargon for the highest percentage of jackpot payouts to customers. 84. The polite soccer phrase is that the Americans had too much respect for the Germans. 85. The predecessor phrase is escape hatch, a nautical term now little used by the politerati. 86. The question in this case was whether that phrase was adequate to meet the Erisa requirements. 87. The original phrase was a bit redundant anyway. 88. The phrase is now the rallying cry of Democrats worried that Bush nominees to the federal bench at all levels will make the court system more conservative. 89. The phrase is part of the national vernacular. 90. The phrase is shorthand for a Quaker principle that the truth often helps those in power to stop deluding themselves. |