Word: drumbeaters
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...with its orange cliffs and lush orchards a few miles from the mountaintop capital of Sana'a, is one of Yemen's most stunning landscapes. As usual, last Friday it was alive with the sounds of a Yemeni wedding celebration. A circle of turbaned men danced to a frenzied drumbeat, brandishing their silver swords and daggers. Suddenly a jubilant member of the wedding party pulled out a Kalashnikov and fired into the air, a practice common during Yemeni celebrations. What happened next was anything but customary. To the astonishment of those gathered, within minutes policemen pounced on the shooter...
...veteran who's leery of all the loose war talk he's been hearing in Washington, had no good answer. "Nobody up here thinks Saddam Hussein can be rehabilitated," Hagel says of his colleagues in the Senate who returned to Washington just as nervous as he about the war drumbeat. "That isn't the issue. We want to follow the president. We want to do what's right. But you have to give us some verification here. You can't just generalize and say, 'Well, he's got this stuff that we're not sure...
Berger was determined that when he left office, Rice should have a full understanding of the terrorist threat. In a sense, this was an admission of failure. For the Clinton years had been marked by a drumbeat of terror attacks against American targets, and they didn't seem to be stopping...
Davis builds his songs like any rock or rap producer. He starts with a drumbeat or bass line, adds piano or guitar to carry the melody, sprinkles in a few odd elements--a triangle, a cello, an organ--to make things interesting, and finishes the whole thing off with vocals. But before he begins, he has to comb through old vinyl bins for raw materials. "In the most passive way," says Davis, "what I put out depends on what comes...
...drumbeat of news about sleazy boardroom behavior has given investors someone to blame--fairly or not--for the money they have lost in stocks over the past two years. Seizing the moment, politicians are undertaking what could be the most sweeping structural reforms in the business world since the 1930s. The N.Y.S.E. has proposed stiff new rules for boards of directors, and the SEC has proposed changes in accounting and auditing procedures. The SEC has already imposed new rules to stamp out conflicts of interest among stock analysts...