In announcing the proposal late Wednesday, Castro said he wanted to send a 31-person entourage with Gonzalez, including Elian's teacher, classmates and a team of psychologists who would help the boy readapt to life with his Cuban family.
32.
He continued to represent Swansea in wartime leagues, and played for the senior team for the first time in 1939 . Paul struggled to readapt to mining life, and volunteered for the Exeter City, and when in Wales he played wartime football for Swansea.
33.
Lucid, 53, will undergo extensive medical testing and a carefully planned rehabilitation regimen to help her readapt to life on Earth and to help doctors learn about the effects of prolonged stays in space and how to counteract the losses of bone, muscle and blood volume that typically occur.
34.
David Rambo, an established playwright ( " God's Man in Texas " ) and part of the writing staff at " CSI, " wasn't exactly trolling for new assignments when he was offered the chance to readapt Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe's California Gold Rush musical, " Paint Your Wagon ."
35.
Captive-bred animals must be trained to readapt to the real world, and as Weidensaul observes, " unless there is a sea change in attitudes on the ranches of the West toward prairie dogs, " the range of the black-footed ferret " will remain dangerously fragmented, subject to local extinctions from disease and chance ."
36.
Talking about different light effects and the intricate characteristics of trees and water and plants was one way of not focusing on the anxiety of her father's absence : Riley's father, a British soldier captured by the Japanese in 1941, survived forced labor on the Siamese railway but, like many war prisoners, took a while to readapt to family life.
37.
As a consequence, Saubade was advised to readapt through the Stade Fran�ais "'Espoirs " ( Juniors ) team for a time, to gain experience from training with many of his new international teammates, to work physically, and then, thanks to some injuries among the starters he was given another chance to show his talent again and he seized it well.
38.
Some of them ( like eyes ) have evolved many times . " ( p . 149 ) Also, Dawkins thinks that evolution is progressive, not in an anthropocentric sense, but because over time life is becoming better adapted, although not in every aspect, as when local conditions change and organisms must move or readapt . " There is no reason to suppose that there is any arrow of overall improvement here . " ( p . 150)