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                <p>Fresh Sticks - Remove Odors Around the Home</p>
                <p>Fresh Sticks help to neutralize odors in your home for up to 2 years. Eliminate tough odors without messy oils and expensive air fresheners. </p>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ars and might have caught by surprise
prosecutors who were armed with the confessions and other evidence."Today's
society faces acute contradictions, and people tend to involuntarily sympathize
with those who are being attacked by the authorities, so he's been
able to portray himself as a victim, as a defeated hero," said
Zhang Lifan, a Chinese historian and political analyst.Courtroom revelations
have painted a colorful picture of how Bo's alleged misconduct enriched
his family. He's accused of providing political favors to a businessman,
Xu Ming, in return for having him at his family's beck and
call. According to Bo's wife, Xu gave the family expensive gifts that
included a villa in France and international airfare to three continents.
Bo is also accused of funneling $800,000 in government funds from a
secret project.Bo has thrown his wife, Gu Kailai, under the bus for
much of the corruption charges and even some aspects of the abuse
of power allegation. Calling her "crazy" after she testified against him,
he said he could not be held responsible for crimes she committed
without his knowledge. But Chinese officialdom is familiar with the strategy
of spreading out an officeholder's illicit assets and wealth among relatives
and trusted friends, so Bo's defense is unlikely to convince the public,
Ding said.The trial laid out how Gu hatched a complicated plan with
the help of two foreigners to hide their family's ownership of the
Fr
er, Joan of Arc in Lillian Hellman's adaptation of Jean Anouilh's
"The Lark." The play had a six-month run, primarily because of the
notices for Harris.The actress was something of a critics' darling, getting
good reviews even when her plays were less-well received. These included
such work as "Marathon `33," "Ready When You Are, C.B.!" and even
a musical, "Skyscraper," adapted from an Elmer Rice play, "Dream Girl."Her
third Tony came for her work in "Forty Carats," a frothy French
comedy about an older woman and a younger man. It was a
big hit, running nearly two years.Harris won her last two Tonys for
playing historical figures -- Mary Todd Lincoln in "The Last of Mrs.
Lincoln" and poet Emily Dickinson in "The Belle of Amherst" by William
Luce. The latter, a one-woman show, became something of an annuity for
Harris, a play she would take around the country at various times
in her career.The actress liked to tour, even going out on the
road in such plays as "Driving Miss Daisy" and "Lettice & Lovage"
after they had been done in New York with other stars.Harris' last
Broadway appearances were in revivals, playing the domineering mother in
a Roundabout Theatre Company production of "The Glass Menagerie" (1994)
and then "The Gin Game" with Charles Durning for the National Actors
Theatre in 1997.In 2005, she was one of five performers to receive
Kennedy Center honors.Harris was born on Dec. 2, 1925, in Grosse Pointe,
Mich., the daughter
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