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Word: regularization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...doesn?t like getting her picture taken, which I find completely annoying when you?re a celebrity. In the early days, you want people to buy your product and you want people to follow you, but when they become rich and famous they don?t have time for regular people anymore, which I find really irritating. For her to say to me that it?s funny and she gets it is a great compliment - she gets that I have fun with it and I?m not trying to be mean-spirited...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Q&A: The Coolest Bloggers | 8/15/2006 | See Source »

...approach to sales, consulting with and referring clients to specialists in taxes, elder law, estate sales, home inspection and health-care advocacy (although clients are free to use their own experts if they choose). Neither the clients nor the specialists pay her for the referrals. "I make only my regular commission on each sale," she says, "no matter how much extra service I provide." And Fennell doesn't stint on the extras. After she helped an elderly woman's adult children sell their mom's duplex in Sun City Center, Fla., she disposed of the belongings left behind--arranging...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Agents | 8/13/2006 | See Source »

...explosives, but such steps would do nothing about the fact that most of the cargo shipped on passenger planes goes entirely uninspected--for bombs or anything else. DHS relies instead on a program it calls Known Shipper, which leaves it up to air carriers and freight forwarders to screen regular cargo customers so they can load boxes onto planes with only spot inspections. The Government Accountability Office warned last October that the industry isn't adequately investigating shippers. But the Bush Administration and the airlines, which make about $17 billion a year from cargo on passenger planes, have resisted introducing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Much Risk Will We Take? | 8/13/2006 | See Source »

...Regular people are often more comfortable assessing risk than officialdom expects. They may not be perfect at it, but they do it every day. Nancy Bort of Arlington, Va., landed at Washington's Dulles International Airport on the first flight from London Heathrow after the arrests. The plane arrived nearly two hours late, and the passengers emerged clutching plastic bags for their passports and not much else. But Bort was unfazed. "I still think I have a greater chance of being hurt in a car accident than getting killed by a terrorist," she said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Much Risk Will We Take? | 8/13/2006 | See Source »

...million Israelis with his blindly flung rockets. (In Palestine's West Bank, recordings of his speeches and ballads of Hizballah warriors are hot sellers.) The Israelis can argue they pushed back Hizballah from the border, killed hundreds of their fighters and replaced enemy militiamen along the border with regular Lebanese army troops and tough international forces. Israel may even be able to exchange its own Lebanese and Palestinian prisoners for two captive Israeli soldiers.( A third soldier was kidnapped by Palestinians militants Hamas, and a senior Hamas official told TIME that his release will depend on what Hizballah decides...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The High Price of Israel's Hubris | 8/11/2006 | See Source »

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