London mayor Ken Livingstone attacked what he called a "vicious" campaign of misinformation against the mosque.
Sinclair got licked, he said, because the opposition ran what he called a Lie Factory.
"There's no question you're disappointed, " said Lamoriello, who made what he called a "competitive offer" to Parise.
In each case, Mr Salmond responded with what he called a "gentle reminder" of his government's policies.
Then Starkweather wanted to make what he called a photo-typesetter, which produced camera-ready copy right on your desk.
Dodd, a Democratic presidential hopeful from Connecticut, outlined what he called a "chronology of neglect" by federal regulators.
Senator McCain made several pledges, including one to build what he called a national interoperable public safety broadband network.
Yesterday Mr. Ebert celebrated 46 years as what he called a movie critic.
Intelligence chief Maj-Gen Michael Gichangi later phoned to apologise for what he called a "small hiccup", Mr Mutunga said.
President Lee Myung-bak praised what he called a "first step towards opening an era of space science in earnest".
Songwriter Don Henley claimed that the RIAA had sabotaged negotiations with what he called a "misleading and contradictory press release".
Mr Kneeland said Nokia was releasing what he called a "3D printing development kit" to help people produce the cases.
In February, Mr Jalili wrote back that Iran was ready for dialogue on what he called a spectrum of issues.
Meanwhile, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said he'd veto what he called a short-sighted measure that would be bad for the city's economy.
He also led what he called a "friendship dance, " in which skiers and onlookers joined hands and moved in a circle.
Candidate Morsy campaigned on delivering what he called a Renaissance Project for Egypt, an economic blueprint that engages wider swaths of society.
Neither did Carmelo Anthony, bothered by what he called a dead arm after being hit in the biceps early in the game.
And in 1910, Teddy Roosevelt came here to Osawatomie and he laid out his vision for what he called a New Nationalism.
One year ago tomorrow, George W. Bush strode into the White House Rose Garden to unveil what he called a "vision" for Mideast peace.
Fed Chairman Bernanke warned Dodd that financial markets are in what he called a "quite fragile condition" and that absent a plan they would certainly get worse.
Speaking in advance of today's Queen's Speech, Mr Maude hailed what he called a "huge area of agreement" between Conservative and Liberal Democrat cabinet ministers.
In a televised statement, he condemned what he called a "cowardly" attack and said the security forces would "take full control" of the Sinai peninsula.
On climate change, Obama promised executive action if Congress failed to address what he called a litany of evidence that the nation and the world face.
CNN: State of the Union brings out more of the 'same old, same old'
Shadow chancellor George Osborne blamed the government for what he called a "catastrophic failure of bank regulation", contributing to the "longest and deepest recession" since the 1930s.
One employee who took time off for what he called a family illness was found in a time-stamped Facebook photo at a costume party, all decked out.
Rushing to the scene, he identified the dead animal as a rat and started what he called a "secondary investigation" to ascertain whether Beastly's find was a one-off.
WSJ: In Alberta, Citizens Smell a Rat After Long-Banned Rodents Appear
Armstrong told Winfrey he was open to talking with anti-doping agencies, including USADA, to address what he called a pervasive "culture" of breaking the rules to get ahead.
Though Netanyahu indicated his "red line" for action might be sooner, referring to what he called a "point of immunity" when Tehran completed enriching enough uranium for a weapon.
CNN: Obama, Netanyahu agree on preventing nuclear-armed Iran
He said one advantage of the sectoral approach was that the results would be measurable and transparent and less subject to what he called a political "beauty contest".
Hebrew University released the poll shortly before Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was due to make what he called a major speech to lay out his plan for the country's peace and security.
CNN: Poll: Half of Israelis back bombing if needed to stop Iran nukes
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