Word: dickerings
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...Whether or not the Iraq war was right, it's the troops on the ground who are bearing the brunt of a failed strategy. We need to get them out." HERBERT M. DICKER Port Washington...
...Federal Housing Authority (FHA) is the best deal. This is called a home-equity conversion mortgage, and many of its costs--including interest, which floats with one-year Treasury bills and is now 3.55%--are consistent from lender to lender. So you don't have to shop or dicker. Exceptions include origination fees, which may be as high as 2% of loan value, and servicing fees, generally around $30 or so a month. Non-FHA reverse mortgages with higher loan limits are available from Fannie Mae (the Homekeeper Loan, up to $322,000). Just remember that a reverse mortgage...
...humor or common sense. Ask about cricket and you'll get an answer, but they'll also remind you that when you're busy waiting in a food line or trying to will your paycheck into keeping pace with galloping inflation, you don't have time or energy to dicker about cricket. "Sport isn't exactly uppermost in our minds," says Godfrey (names have been changed to protect the speakers), an office administrator. "We're worried about our day-to-day existence." So is Mugabe, which might explain why Zimbabwe's status as a World Cup host - and the credibility...
...Croatian authorities have a responsibility to arrest Bobetko without delay and transfer him to the Hague," says spokesman Jim Landale. Prosecution spokeswoman Florence Hartmann says "there is nothing to negotiate," as "no government can challenge or reject or reverse an indictment that's been confirmed." Something deeper worries Richard Dicker, director of Human Rights Watch's international justice program. "Some in Zagreb," he fears, "draw comfort from the Bush Administration's objections to an International Criminal Court" and enjoy seeing "the world's only superpower going on a jihad against international justice." Ironically, the Bobetko dispute comes as Croatia...
...Serb leader presents no legal defense, prosecutors believe they can make a swift case for conviction that is able to withstand appeal. But that would present its own problem. "It will be difficult to explain the lack of adversarial picture that people expect in court," says Dicker. "For that reason, it poses a real challenge to the judges: that the trial be fair to Mr. Milosevic and be seen as being fair." For the credibility of the tribunal, that is key. More than anything, the trial and its verdict need to convince the world's victims and villains alike that...