Word: objectives
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...allow interrogation techniques some view as inhumane. Prisoners and their lawyers will be able to see edited versions of the classified evidence to be used against them. What They Lost Bush agreed to make public some details about the program's tactics, giving Congress and citizens a chance to object. The Senators will let the CIA keep some "off the books" detainees. They could be subject to abuse verging on torture. The bill would effectively void habeas corpus petitions of detainees who have demanded to be either charged or freed...
...first I thought it was a rock, the specialty of street urchins--a harmless shot against an armored humvee. I gazed down and spotted an object on the wooden bench 2 ft. away. The dark oval was as shiny and smooth as a tortoiseshell, roughly 6 in. long and 4 in. wide. None of my fellow passengers seemed to notice. I confronted the intruder alone, a journalist caught in a military moment. Something told me there was no time to consult the soldiers...
...rose halfway, leaned to the right, and cupped the object. I might as well have plucked volcanic lava from a crater. I could feel the flesh of my palm liquefying. Pain bolted up my arm like an electric current. In one fluid motion, I raised my right arm and started to throw the mass over the side of the vehicle, a short backhand toss. Then everything went dark...
...would close it. My first lesson with an occupational therapist, Captain Kathleen Yancosek, focused on how to isolate those muscles. Using a tool called "Myo-boy," Captain Katie strapped electrodes onto each of my forearm muscles and plugged the other end of a cord into a laptop computer. The object was to generate a spike on the monitor by flexing the right muscle. I jerked, twitched and turned my stump. Nothing happened. I pumped again, hunting for the right spot, but the monitor stayed blank. When I grew frustrated, Katie had me close my eyes to map the muscle...
...governor of a liberal state, so he has to go to pains to kind of separate himself from that state,” McGrory said in an interview. “Now what he seems to be doing is throwing Harvard into the mix and making Harvard the object of some of his criticism, so he will never be considered a Harvard elitist...