Word: ridding
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Assassination is a terrific idea. And from the Palestinian point of view, getting rid of that warmonger Ariel Sharon could only be a blessing. Oh, and the Pope's anti-birth control stand is just a little much, don't you think? Or maybe we should just sit down and try to work out our differences. That is what Krauthammer should be writing about. JAMES MILLS Hanover...
...some sound from Asia or from elsewhere, and all of a sudden my recordings may take a turn that I hadn't anticipated. You can't really program music. A musical life really shouldn't have any limits. I don't really believe in formats, and once you get rid of formats, everything is available to you. When you break out of categories, you automatically encounter new things. It's from these new experiences that interesting things happen...
...think that one single counter-attack will rid the world of terrorism of the kind we saw yesterday," said Secretary of State Colin Powell on Wednesday. Indeed, it is to be anticipated that the Bush administration will develop a layered response of short-term and long-term actions to bring to bear military, economic and political pressure to isolate and neutralize not only Bin Laden himself, but the movement that would almost certainly seek to continue even if he were eliminated. And that's a war in which the U.S. needs its allies more than ever...
...Appalachian State University last month, Bruce Withrow, 52, remembered how he and his classmates were greeted at another North Carolina university 33 years earlier, when baby boomers were swelling enrollments. "We've got too many of you here," an administrator told them. "And we're going to get rid of a bunch of you." That's a far cry from the message that Rich and other incoming students get at Appalachian. "All of you have the ability to do well here," Joe Watts, an associate vice chancellor, assured a group of freshmen. "You'll have problems--but we'll help...
...tidy few billion to U.S. tax revenues, too. (And the Bush administration has signaled that any form of legalization should involve the undocumented workers paying a fine for having broken the law until now.) They're already an integral part of the U.S. economy, and trying to get rid of them would be harmful. And raising the status of the undocumented Mexican underclass could also help Bush grow his share of the increasingly-important Latino vote - an estimated 60 percent of U.S. Latinos are of Mexican origin...