Word: aerially
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Cambridge School of Weston. “But I’d rather see Trisha move than talk.” In hushed tones, Brown alternated between casually speaking about her experiences with dance and enacting those encounters. In one such moment, she started talking about her transition from aerial work on rooftops back to grounded movement. The 71-year-old woman then suddenly got up with a smile. “I’m sorry I’m laughing, but I’m happy,” she said...
...bloggers were quick to note, there was also a certain irony to his selection. For Scully holds one view that Governor Palin’s record supporting the aerial gunning of Alaskan wolves suggests she may not—a deep concern for the welfare and protection of animals...
...implementing the surge, Odierno pushed five new brigades into Baghdad's neighborhoods and gave them surveillance equipment like aerial drones, ground sensors and blimps with closed-circuit cameras, allowing each small outpost to watch over many city blocks. He also worked with the Iraqi forces to bring National Police and Iraqi army soldiers into Baghdad from all over the country. Displaying political dexterity, he persuaded a nervous Iraqi government to sign on to the Sons of Iraq program, which turned thousands of insurgents into neighborhood-watch groups. If Petraeus gets credit for ushering in the surge, it was Odierno...
...meet. With times of 2:19.63 and 2:25.12, Pitchik and Pratt displayed complete dominance and showed great potential to fill the void left by departed breaststroker Jackie Pangilinan ’08.In diving, Harvard also blew away the competition. The Crimson divers displayed an array of aerial somersaults, turns, and flips, drawing attention from the crowd.Leading the way was sophomore Jenny Reese, who won both the 1-meter and 3-meter events. Classmate Anne Taylor finished second in 3-meter competition, while freshman Leslie Rea was third in the 1-meter event.As well as Harvard performed throughout the afternoon...
...find a winning strategy in a fight whose cost in both blood and treasure continues to mount even as security disintegrates. Coalition soldiers are dying in greater numbers now than in any year since 2001. So are Afghan civilians - who are victims of the insurgency as well as mistaken aerial bombardments made necessary by a shortage of troops. The Bush Administration, in its assessment due in December, will recommend a doubling of the Afghan military, yet it neglects to say how that impoverished country can support an army of 160,000 or more. Former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell...