Word: monitors
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...hear me. Alford is too busy encouraging her fellow models before the opening sequence in which she will figure prominently. “Ya’ll are superstars, you look beautiful,” I hear her say before she walks out. Watching the runway from the backstage monitor, I see Alford. Game on. She struts down with a sudden seriousness that makes me understand why this former president of the Association of Black Harvard Women has come to be known as one of the College’s most prominent seniors. But as I’m watching...
...proposed rules would remove “obsolete provisions used prior to implementation of the SEVIS, a Web-enabled database that provides current information on F, M and J non-immigrants in the United States.” That this money is going to a system meant primarily to monitor and record the activities of students is worrying. These adjustments represent yet more bureaucratic tweaking to an unfortunate trend in immigration procedures—namely, the increasing cost of entering the U.S. Rather than continue to raise the economic bar to foreigners wishing to enter the country, the federal government...
...worried too much about it. Many would argue that with the unprecedented complexities of determining enemy actions in the War on Terror, the ordinary procedures of establishing crime may not be effective and that some liberties must be forsaken for increased homeland security. Perhaps allowing the government to monitor your phone calls is prudent if it prevents future terrorist attacks.However, American citizens should be aware of the record of its government’s record abroad when there is no constitutional or judicial oversight over their actions. A government that disregards human values abroad, engages in torture, and arbitrarily detains...
...site has a team of 20 that monitor the day-to-day developments of the election in order to synthesize them within the entire record of a particular candidate or issue...
...McCain senior adviser Mark Salter said the candidate continues to monitor whether the techniques employed by the CIA officials pass legal muster. "If McCain has reason to believe that they have crossed the line, he will litigate that," Salter said, explaining that the Senator might discuss these concerns publicly or privately. "McCain communicates his view directly to the people doing it," Salter added, in reference to interrogation procedures...