Word: ridded
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Community service can be a way of getting rid of guilt in some ways," Wuchinich says...
...controversy. They're just trying to upscale the area." Another South End dweller tells a similar version of the "No Greed" story. "They're snootifying the area," he says. "They want to make it too nice for us, so they can kick us out and get rid...
...talking to you about democracy," Barry said. "Things are a mess [in Washington]. [The federal government] had the audacity to get rid of the elected school board...
Some questioned America's moral right to bomb Iraq, while others demanded that this time the U.S. do the job properly and get rid of Saddam Hussein. The prospect of war managed to anger the political left and right simultaneously. And the replies they got from the nation's top foreign-policy officials were limp, cant-filled and suspiciously incomplete. Columbus mirrored the very same problem President Bill Clinton faces in trying to persuade most of America's allies, the Arab world and marginally friendly countries like Russia and China. He hasn't done any better with them than...
...White House is broadcasting at full volume and plans a Clinton address to the nation if any military action is to be undertaken. But the Administration is advertising a complicated and unsatisfying product. Clinton's policy on Iraq, as he admits, is not one that will either get rid of Saddam or wipe out his capacity to build and stockpile weapons of mass destruction--chemical and biological--and the missiles to carry them. The plan to bomb anyway, if Saddam does not allow U.N. inspectors free entry everywhere, and then maybe bomb again later, sounds like a series of half...