Word: freedly
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...impasse. We watch him grimly purify his body and prepare to kill, coiling himself up to lash out, then arming himself to the hilt in order to strike at his enemy, the whole of New York City. After the blood-splattering eruption we see Travis looking pacified, his system freed of the rage. We know there can only be one conclusion: that there was never any solution...
...Penitentiary last week into bright sunshine and into a brighter world of freedom. At the foot of the steps, the pair turned back toward the prison and raised their arms in victory to friends peering out the barred windows. Ezequiel Puentes-Prieto claimed he had never despaired of being freed because "I've never done anything wrong." His companion Jorge Perez-Paez had not lost hope either but admitted, "I had gotten depressed about ever leaving...
...were among the first of 381 Cuban refugees ordered freed by Federal District Judge Marvin Shoob of Atlanta. Of the more than 125,000 Cubans who flooded onto the shores of south Florida last year, some 1,800 still languish in the Atlanta prison. Two weeks ago, Judge Shoob ran out of patience. Calling the Cubans "people" and "not numbers," he ordered federal officials to release 381 who were imprisoned simply because they had entered the U.S. without the proper papers. Government lawyers did not object to freeing the 155 who had already been cleared by the Immigration and Naturalization...
...indication of the restlessness beneath the authoritarian veneer was the scene last week as the government freed the country's last civilian President, Maria Estela Martinez de Perón, 49, after five years of detention. A onetime cabaret dancer, she assumed power after the death in 1974 of her husband, Dictator Juan Domingo Perón, but proved to be woefully incompetent and was jailed in 1976 by the military junta for misusing public property. The military finally arranged her release to remove a rallying point for her still loyal followers, who remain the most potent civilian political...
...thus cleared for the release of $2.3 billion in Iranian assets still held in U.S. banks-the last of the estimated $12 billion that Carter had frozen during the hostage crisis. Of the newly freed assets, $1.3 billion will now return to Iran. The remaining $1 billion will go into a special fund to cover awards by an arbitration tribunal meeting at The Hague. (Iran is pledged to replenish this fund so as to keep a minimum balance of $500 million.) It is to this body that U.S. companies must now submit their claims against Iran. The tribunal, comprising three...