Word: furiousness
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...assumed that the HSTO was a bloodsucker of the highest order—what kind of profit were they making off my $5.75 23 minute phone call to my sister in Philadelphia? Who still pays 25 cents a minute for long distance? To add insult to injury, I was furious last week when I received the additional notice that long distance rates are being hiked up by 7.5 percent and that my monthly charge for local service is going up an additional $3 a month. Surely HSTO must be making a fortune off its gold mine racquet of the Harvard...
...Northeastern Huskies (13-1-0, 9-1-0 ECAC-E), came out fast and furious on Friday night, capitlizing on a sometimes shaky Crimson (5-6-1, 3-1-1 ECAC...
...fast. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham, who's furious that the GAO report was prematurely leaked, dismissed the study as "fatally flawed." Abraham appears intent on recommending to President Bush soon that the nuclear waste be located at Yucca. If Bush agrees, Nevada's governor and legislature can still veto the site. But Congress then has 60 days to override the state's disapproval. If it gets to that point, count on Reid to use all his powers as Senate majority whip to block the congressional override...
...rebels calling themselves the Albanian National Army remained in control of several villages and warned security forces not to enter. The group claimed responsibility for the killing of three policemen earlier in the week. ALGERIA Disastrous Toll Security forces moved in to protect government buildings in Algiers as furious protesters blamed authorities for the high death toll in the country?s worst flood for 40 years. More than 850 people were feared killed, and the Red Cross launched an appeal for $1.2 million to help 24,000 people left homeless or destitute. Residents of the capital?s poorer areas accused...
...terrorism instructions through his attorney. Justice Department officials pointed out that the fruits of the eavesdropping would be used only to prevent imminent attacks and that the information could not be used in court--at least not without a judge's approval. But civil libertarians and defense lawyers were furious anyway; attorney-client privacy has long been a sacrosanct privilege of common law. "This essentially allows the Attorney General to overrule [that] privilege whenever he chooses without judicial supervision," says Steve Shapiro of the A.C.L.U. A court challenge is assured...