Word: fates
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...loss against Brown on Saturday left the Crimson’s fate in the hands of the selection committee. A win agaisnt the Bears would have given the Crimson an automatic tournament berth in addition to the Ivy League title...
...Hints coming out of Afghanistan and the Pentagon suggested that bin Laden was desperately trying to avoid his fate. He burrowed into the country's most remote terrain, sheltered by a small band of bodyguards willing to die in his defense. Pakistani intelligence sources told Time that al-Qaeda survivors were likely to lodge themselves in narrow canyons among the summits, near dried riverbeds shielded from American pilots by boulders and shadows. Some U.S. officials fretted that bin Laden might fake his death...
...This may account for why the rhetoric of the Taliban leader took on apocalyptic tones last week that seemed to betray his despair about the fate of his movement and his own dim prospects for survival. From an undisclosed location, Omar broadcast messages predicting his death in battle and naming Mullah Baradar, a former governor in Herat who commanded Taliban troops in Kabul, his successor. Early in the week he gave an interview to the bbc's Pashtu news service in which he predicted "the destruction of America. If Allah's help is with us, this will happen within...
...time for celebration in New Haven, however, has passed. The hapless Yalies will meet their fate tomorrow afternoon in the form of an unbeaten Crimson football team, already the owners of the Ivy League Championship. We look forward to watching the hurricane that is the undefeated Harvard football team make short work of the pasty and feeble Bulldogs. And we pray for the safety of tens of thousands of loyal Harvard fans who will descend upon New Haven, braving the crack dealers, prostitutes and other prestigious Yale alumni to cheer on their undefeated team...
...battered soul himself, he claims to be responsible for one crime only, the original sin determining his miserable fate: that of being his father?s son. But six weeks after the book?s publication, a new investigation was opened into Jean-Christophe?s business dealings in Africa. Maybe the judge hasn?t read this book...