Word: dares
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...certainly didn't seem to have made plans for evacuation and disaster management in this major urban area. The scale of the disaster may have been unprecedented, but I thought the Bush Administration had spent the years since 9/11 planning for the unprecedented. Beth Conlin Brookline, Massachusetts, U.S. How dare anyone blame President George W. Bush for this disaster. The left-wingers have criticized the Bush Administration constantly. How can anyone - politician or member of the news media - not support our government? The critics have gone too far. We must work together, and those who can't must stay...
...dare anyone blame the President for this disaster. The left-wingers have criticized the Bush Administration constantly. How can anyone--politician or member of the news media--not support our government? The critics have gone too far. We must work together, and those who can't must stay out of the way. I am tired of the divide in this country. SUZANN SOLIDAY Fresno, Calif...
...British officer gets a suspicious amount of screen time, suggesting that this film was carefully calculated to do well with audiences in Britain and America. But for all its stereotypes and implausibilities, this is a movie worth defending: because if everyone attacks The Rising, who in India will dare to make another historical film? And if provocative period pieces become a thing of the past, we are doomed to a future in which confections about ishq rule unchallenged...
...says Key, "is like playing Andre Agassi at tennis every week. It improves your game enormously.") In a TVNZ studio, during a debate between eight economics spokesmen, Cullen is itching to get involved, like a burly rugby breakaway hoping to crunch a small ball carrier if he would only dare to come his side of the ruck. Perky, motor-mouthed Cullen hints at Key's hidden agenda to cut public services and reprise the scorched-earth policies of former financial warriors Roger Douglas and Ruth Richardson; he scoffs when Key claims his tax plan will stop the 600 Kiwis...
...youthful Armand (Robert Taylor) as a gift from the gods; and, with her anguished, rapturous death, she leaves it with him. Her performance raises melodrama to a feature-length epiphany. No actress today could play a courtesan's self-sacrifice at such a high and perfect pitch. None would dare...