Word: formalizes
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...policies, on health care (persuading him to embrace HMO legislation) and the environment, after his rejection of tough arsenic standards and a treaty on global warming. When piecemeal statements on the Middle East crisis reinforced the impression that he was not engaged, she was among those who urged a formal Rose Garden speech outlining the President's position...
...settled on a full-scale ground invasion of Iraq early next year with between 70,000 and 250,000 U.S. troops. But military and civilian officials insist that there is no finalized battle plan or timetable - and that Bush has not even been presented with a formal list of options. Instead, the Times story, with its vision of a large-scale troop deployment, seems to have been the latest volley in the bureaucratic war at home, leaked by uniformed officers who think some of their civilian overseers have been downplaying the size and difficulty of an attack...
Coupled with these more formal proposals, the report also suggests House-based race initiatives as a way of informally providing students, tutors and Faculty with increased awareness of ethnicity. As a recent Crimson survey found that more people interact with those of other races in the Houses than anywhere else, initiatives like these have a great deal of promise. The recommendation seeks to strengthen and elucidate the role of each House’s race relations tutor. Many Houses already have successful pre-med, business awareness and sexuality issue tutors who, via House events, call attention to their interests. Likewise...
...works depict the heads and faces of her peers on 12- by-18 inch canvases. Her style is realistic, and the faces are made only slightly larger than actual size, allowing for the illusion of a real-life confrontation. “The size was a formal decision and one appropriate to the project. The subjects are life-size and fill the frame,” Kussell said...
...hair pulled back in sparkly barrettes, funky jewelry dangling from her neck and Saucony sneakers peaking out from the bottom of her pants, Elizabeth H. Hagan ’02-’03 looks like she’d rather be at a SoHo coffee house than a formal tea party. But Hagan was born and raised in Atlanta and comes from a long line of debutantes. “I absolutely refused to participate in the process,” she says. “My mother had these letters [of recommendation] written up anyway and was like...