Word: fitly
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...Struck. There was little criticism of the change in U.S. strategy. "Let's face it, the cold war is over," says Jean-Vincent Brisset, a military expert at France's Institute for International and Strategic Relations. "The U.S. forces came to save Europe, but their presence today doesn't fit with current doctrine." The larger issue is whether the recall, set to begin in 2006, will degrade a transatlantic alliance already damaged by Iraq. "It's not a strategic divorce," says Jeff Gedmin, director of the Aspen Institute in Berlin. "I think both sides need each other in different ways...
...that is potentially a great service for student groups,” Mahan said. “But if the administration had consulted student groups, or at least the [council], they would have seen that there are reasons why groups use other banks—one size does not fit...
...doubt the very fact that I am a protester makes it easy for you to write me off as an “extremist”—a term your campaign seems fond of affixing to opponents these days. As a college student in Cambridge I, admittedly, fit the stereotype. But I am also a voter from the key swing state of Arizona, and I live in a congressional district which has voted for the same Republican since 1984. If I am an extremist, it is only in the sense that I care more deeply about the future...
That doesn't mean that the link between influenza and schizophrenia is airtight. "It's really important to duplicate these results," says Dr. Alan Brown, a psychiatrist at the New York State Psychiatric Institute in New York City, who led the study. But the new findings fit a pattern that has been emerging since researchers noticed a spike in cases of schizophrenia among people born in Denmark in 1957 during a major flu epidemic...
...behaved like "an adult child," Krause says. "He was tantrum filled." When Krause was a high school sophomore, he began to deeply question "the world that was created inside [his] little house." Questions ran through him so fast he couldn't sleep, but he kept them bottled up to fit in. Eventually, Krause contemplated suicide. Therapy brought him back to balance. "Suicide is a temporary solution to a permanent problem," he says, upending the old cliche. "Your soul is not going anywhere. So you learn to relax...