Word: abay
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...National Association of Professional Environmentalists, says that Nile governments should be looking at geothermal and solar-power generation. "We run the risk of building these huge white elephants that benefit factories and cities but not the people who need [power]," he says. That is precisely what locals in Tis Abay, a town next to the Blue Nile Falls in Ethiopia, believe happened when a new power station was opened three years ago. Water from the Nile is now diverted away from the falls to generators, most of whose power is exported to the nearby regional capital and into the national...
...poet discovered his fountains both in the great, welling springs of north Florida (in his Travels, William Bartram wrote of them that "the ebullition is astonishing and continual") and in Abyssinia or Ethiopia. Alexander reports ruefully that the Ethiopian fountain, at a place called Gishe Abay, was thought to have magical properties, but may no longer; as a female, she unknowingly defiled the flow with her touch. Or so she was assured by locals...
...people in the countryside. In this sense, the Huk war is a struggle for the confidence of thousands of peasants and rural workers who in their underpaid, underprivileged past have never been given much reason for confidence. Who is winning this struggle now? Maybe a certain Colonel Abay knows a little of the answer. And the men of Bamban in Tarlac, and a peasant boy of Nueva Ecija-maybe they know a little. Let them speak...
...Night, Look Out." Colonel Eustaquire Abay (rhymes with buy) is deputy commander of the Second Military Area, which includes the entire region south of Manila. He is displayed as an example and spokesman of the new order which started when the ground forces took over the "pacification campaign." Things are better, he says. Many people in troubled Batangas province, who had been afraid to live in their barrios (villages), and who fled to the relative safety of the towns, are moving back to their old homes. The roads are safe. In this area the Huks are weaker, much weaker, than...
...Colonel Abay's young intelligence officer, Captain Herman Sevillia, tells with great earnestness of new efforts to win the people's trust. It is a matter of convincing them that the army can protect them. "Then the people talk to us," the captain says. "They tell us their troubles. If we do not have the aid of the people, we do not know which ones to shoot...