Word: bolognas
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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When not on-stage, however, Frias found courses at the University of Bologna easier and less intense than those at Harvard. Altogether, she was impressed by the open-mindedness of Italian culture...
...minute drive, but he likes to get there early. He jams a blue baseball cap on his head, turns to Annette and says, "I'm gonna go." She replies, "O.K., let me pack you lunch." Brittany, eager to help out, slathers a little extra mayonnaise on his bologna. He grabs the sandwich and pecks his wife on the lips. She tells him she loves him--offhandedly, casually, the way such things go. And then Fogle strides out of his kitchen, through his living room and out the screen door, gets into his Toyota pickup and takes off down the back...
...talking about drugs, either. Well, not exactly. The D word is carefully avoided by the nine friends who recently opened the PuraVida Shop in downtown Rome, even though most customers refer to their merchandise as "smart drugs." The store, along with similar "smart shops" recently opened in Milan and Bologna, gives Italy its first sniff of a quietly burgeoning Europe-wide market for all-natural, mostly herb-based substances that advertise an out-of-the-ordinary physical sensation without the ugly side effects of synthetic drugs. Both scientists and customers say it is a much softer experience than Jimi...
...qualitative and quantitative terms" - though he would give no examples. But other U.S. and European officials deride the information from Camp Delta as mostly low-level and dated. One senior U.S. official with access to intelligence says he's not impressed with the quality of the interrogations. A Bologna investigator says despite the access given by the Americans, the detainees who used to live in Italy are refusing to talk until they're back. "We're blocked," he says. "We can't move forward with our investigations." There's also concern that the security-first, individual rights- second posture...
...Austria to Argentina. The British edition appeared earlier this month, and negotiations are now under way for one in the U.S. But Luther Blissett the footballer didn't write a word of Q. His name was hijacked in the mid-1990s by a band of libertarian-left cyberactivists in Bologna. They called themselves the Luther Blissett Project because, as they wrote in one of their many manifestos, Blissett is "the ineffable alias that means both everybody and nobody." Ineffable is an apt word for the group's nonfiction: dense Internet screeds against globalization, political corruption, corporate control of the media...