Word: closed
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Dates: during 2000-2000
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...with e-mail exchanges in between, if needed. Sessions tend to cost anywhere from $250 to $500 a month and are not covered by insurance. Coaches insist they stay more focused on the phone and are often better listeners than friends and family can be. "Without realizing it, people close to you may have their own agendas for you," said Ann Fisher, based in Illinois, who left a magazine-publishing job to become a coach...
...sought medical treatment for Umair in the U.S. on two previous trips. Last year she left her husband, country and life of financial security in Karachi for the modest two-bedroom apartment in Chicago that she shares with her sons. "I couldn't take it anymore," she says. "My close friends would say, 'The mad boy is coming' and hide their children so that his shadow would not come to their children." To appease her relatives, she dragged Umair to religious sites and forced him to drink "holy water." She fears that as Umair gets older, he will be taken...
...focus of his storytelling almost exclusively the rush of feelings that coursed through him as he recovered from surgery--his own postcards from the edge. On I Can't Move, he tells how a part of him flirted with death, almost welcoming it: "Want to get near it, close enough to fear it, close enough to hear it," he sings. In the marvelous, bouncing Babylon Feeling, he regrets that his own obsession with materialism may have led him straight to a hospital bed: "My heart is broke, my will is gone." And on Mercy on My Soul, he contemplates...
...through the next-door office of the firm Waterworks, spent roughly two hours answering questions and pressing his theories. The FBI did some brief questioning next door but was more interested in looking at the Waterworks postage machine and taking samples from its copier. But those actions, say sources close to the case, have more to do with Lozano's activity, which continues to be a keen focus of FBI scrutiny...
...contest quite possibly as exciting and filled with suspense. For the past 19 weeks, we've been tracking the pledges offered by the candidates on the stump to see who would make 100 pledges first. Gore came out the winner, which brings our pledge drive to a close. No doubt the pledges will continue, but now you'll have to tally them on your own. Following, some of the more recent ones that took Gore over...