Word: normalization
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...easy. Losses are about €1 million a month, advertising has dwindled and readership has shrunk. That Libé is hard up isn't exactly news. For years it has been kept afloat partly by loans from sympathizers whose politics outweighed their business sense. "It was not a normal business," says Bertrand Pecquerie, director of the Paris-based World Editors Forum, who previously worked at the paper. "Everyone in Paris knew that when you put money into Libé, you were sure to lose it." That attitude came to an end as the losses ballooned. And Rothschild's decision last...
...hard to break. And O?Grady was the kind of man who is capable of seducing a mother in order to gain easier access to his real prey, her children, both male and female. The trail of ruined lives he left behind - men and women incapable of marriage, of normal sexual lives - is a palpable sadness in this film. And that says nothing about the damage he did to the religious beliefs that were so important in their humble lives...
...sign that life is returning to normal following the war in northern Israel, the 22nd Annual Haifa Film Festival opened this past weekend to big crowds. When life returns to normal in Gaza, children will be able to attend school without fear. This is the sad state of affairs at the present moment in the Middle East...
...apartment when she found out about the incident. “Usually she comes into the city earlier in the day,” said Shemtov, whose grandmother was delayed at home for two hours. “She could’ve been there under normal circumstances.” Shemtov was not the only Harvard affiliate in the building. “I’m aware that there are several Harvard alumni who live in the building,” he said. Passing planes and helicopters are not an unusual part of the view from Shemtov?...
Luckily for the actor, his own head seems to have retained its normal size despite the fact Harvard theater has become quite pro-Fishburn in recent years. After a marathon of appearances on Harvard stages that culminated with his participation in three Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club (HRDC) shows last semester, Fishburn has restricted himself to just one play this term, describing it as “methodone to the sort of heroin.” Yet given the intensity of the work Fishburn put into the production—where the previously mentioned monologue constituted the entirety...