Word: repeater
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...eight years, registered 0.2% growth.) And the economic downturn is something that started before Bush took office, a fact that the President and his surrogates not surprisingly point out at every turn. "For the last 12 months," Bush told a Teamsters rally in Detroit on Labor Day, "let me repeat--for the last 12 months--the economy has been way too slow." He added, "People are hurting. And people are suffering. And there are families who wonder about how they're going to feed their kids, and I understand that, and we've got help in Washington." Message: I care...
...your own Live365.com channel. You can select the option to apply for a station on the site, free, and upload MP3s containing as many songs as you want. You can replace old MP3s with new ones to keep the flow of music fresh, or allow the same selections to repeat ad infinitum. Laws designed to ensure that Web radio can't function as a Napsterish file-sharing system forbid you to broadcast chunks of an album or a lot of tracks from one artist within a short period of time. However, just about any other narrower format is fair game...
...idea to repeat a line from the 19th century French anarchist thinker Pierre-Joseph Prou-dhon: "The fecundity of the unexpected far exceeds the prudence of statesmen." America, in the spasms of a few hours, became a changed country. It turned the corner, at last, out of the 1990s. The menu of American priorities was rearranged. The presidency of George W. Bush begins now. What seemed important a few days ago (in the media, at least) became instantly trivial. If Gary Condit is mentioned once in the next six months on cable television, I will be astonished...
...shoud not repeat history when mistakes were made against Japanese-Americans,” he said...
...idea to repeat a line from the 19th century French anarchist thinker Pierre-Joseph Prou-dhon: "The fecundity of the unexpected far exceeds the prudence of statesmen." America, in the spasms of a few hours, became a changed country. It turned the corner, at last, out of the 1990s. The menu of American priorities was rearranged. The presidency of George W. Bush begins now. What seemed important a few days ago (in the media, at least) became instantly trivial. If Gary Condit is mentioned once in the next six months on cable television, I will be astonished...