Word: afterward
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Even House Speaker Dennis Hastert became miffed when he felt he was being used. Hastert visited Bush early in the week for a long-planned conference on issues affecting his state of Illinois. But afterward, Bush aides declined to douse press speculation that the two were meeting without Lott to plan Congress's legislative agenda. "They got too cute by half down there," a senior Senate G.O.P. aide says of the White House...
Part I of that statement, of course, was the way the Crimson played. There was a lot of “ebb and flow” to the game, as BC coach Jerry York said afterward. Harvard fell behind early, tied it, fell behind again, tied it again and nearly won it, both in regulation and overtime...
...efficient and easy to fire and require little instruction; al-Qaeda trainees were taught how to use them in the Afghan camps. The U.S. supplied hundreds of shoulder-fired Stinger missiles to the mujahedin fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan; Washington was so concerned about their potential for trouble afterward that it offered as much as $100,000 per missile to try to buy them back. But shoulder-fired missiles made in Yugoslavia, Pakistan and China slosh around the weapons black market, where they sell for a few thousand dollars each...
...would roll back the tax on wealthy Social Security recipients. She admires neither Washington values nor Washingtonspeak. When Terrell didn't know the answer to one of Tim Russert's questions during a head-to-head debate on Meet the Press, she admitted she didn't know, explaining afterward that she didn't want to be "overprepared and seem robotic." In a state with a strong preference for characters, Terrell sticks to her talking points and doesn't worry about charisma. Terrell supporter and Republican Congressman Billy Tauzin, himself a character, says, "Every now and then, even in a state...
...would roll back the tax on wealthy Social Security recipients. She admires neither Washington values nor Washingtonspeak. When Terrell didn't know the answer to one of Tim Russert's questions during a head-to-head debate on Meet the Press, she admitted she didn't know, explaining afterward that she didn't want to be "overprepared and seem robotic." In a state with a strong preference for characters, Terrell sticks to her talking points and doesn't worry about charisma. Terrell supporter and Republican Congressman Billy Tauzin, himself a character, says, "Every now and then, even in a state...