Word: normalized
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...been calling for the withdrawal of 20,000 American troops as soon as the Iraqi elections are completed on Dec. 15. He has said this knowing full well that the Pentagon is planning to reduce the force by 20,000 after Dec. 15 as part of its normal troop-rotation schedule. One hopes he won't be so crass as to take credit for the drawdown when it occurs. But then Kerry-and many other Democrats-have been calling for a phased withdrawal of U.S. troops, based on progress in Iraq, as if that were some sort of bold...
...McAlhany said he saw Alpizar before the flight and is absolutely stunned by what unfolded on the airplane. He says he saw Alpizar eating a sandwich in the boarding area before getting on the plane. He looked normal at that time, McAlhany says. He thinks the whole thing was a mistake: "I don't believe he should be dead right...
...that basis alone, [it’s] a relatively safe place to run.” Ignatieff’s politically-driven homecoming was met with some resentment from Canadians who are upset that the Liberal Party “pushed aside some of the normal constituency processes to have what we call in Canada, Ignatieff parachuted into the riding,” said Albo. Since his departure from academia to enter the upcoming Canadian elections, Ignatieff has been criticized in Canada for failing to align with the Liberal Party by supporting U.S. President George W. Bush?...
...prohibits transfer applications—and that we were accepted to Harvard this fall as visiting students—such rules must be reconsidered in light of the unique situation Hurricane Katrina has created. It must be recognized that these rules were not designed to apply to freshmen. Under normal circumstances, only students who have completed a year at another university are eligible to apply to Harvard’s visiting student program, and all further rules were constructed under the assumption that visiting students had a home institution at which they spent their freshman year. Tulane cannot be considered...
...them to stick to the story to avoid the death penalty--but the fact that they affirmed their confessions doesn't help their case. No wonder prosecutor D.J. Hansen, who put the men behind bars, says there is nothing new in the petition that wasn't tested in the normal judicial process. "Justice was done," he says. But as Carol Moore has learned the hard way, in the age of CSI and DNA, justice is never truly done, even if it appears as if the truth has already spoken...