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Word: assassine (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...atmosphere on campus could progress until we developed a culture of the game Assassin, only for real! Why bother knocking off your House comrades when you can go after that annoying sniveler who’s right above you in the rankings? Extra points for orchestrating a particularly clever demise. Arsenic in General Wong’s? A quick push down the Science Center stairs? Harvard would be helping us hone that killer instinct...

Author: By Robert J. Fenster, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: A Proposal To End Inflation | 11/28/2001 | See Source »

Eager crowds formed lines around the Congregational First Church up to an hour before Atwood was scheduled to speak, thumbing through copies of Harry Potter novels along with Atwood’s best-sellers—The Edible Woman, The Handmaid’s Tale and The Blind Assassin among them—as they waited...

Author: By Catherine E. Shoichet, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Author Atwood Discusses Writing | 11/20/2001 | See Source »

...field of his first triumph. And let the record show that at no point in this book does Morris introduce himself into a subplot of the action. On the mid-September day in 1901 when Vice President Roosevelt gets word that President William McKinley has succumbed to an assassin's bullet, Morris isn't the messenger who brings the telegram. When Teddy plots to uncouple Panama from Colombia--so that the U.S. could have a freer hand to build its great canal across the isthmus--Morris is not bending to the presidential lunch table to serve the soup and listen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: All Steady On Teddy | 11/19/2001 | See Source »

...briefly when an outsider swaggers in, such as Alexander the Great, the Soviets and now the Americans. Left to themselves, they plant land mines to settle a property dispute. A youth from Peshawar was recently celebrated in the newspapers as a true Pashtun hero for shooting his father's assassin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Pashtun: Deep Loyalties, Ancient Hatreds | 11/19/2001 | See Source »

...often yield greater creativity, as writers come up with new twists on old conventions. In Cusack’s case, witness Gross Pointe Blank, which took the romantic comedy genre (in which Cusack most comfortably walks) and tweaked it, hilariously, by making Cusack’s leading man an assassin. Unfortunately, for every inspired screenplay, there are hundreds of others that are content to play by the rules, re-staging old scenes and re-hashing old material. We’re consequently served up fare that, in its eagerness to showcase Cusack’s widespread appeal, arrives with hardly...

Author: By Emma Firestone, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Being John Cusack | 10/5/2001 | See Source »

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