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Usage:

...You’re right, it is a Red Sox fan thing to delight in the Yankees misfortune. It just goes along with my plan, if I’m ever filthy rich, to buy the Yankees as opposed to the Red Sox. I’d have to hide from crazy New Yorkers who’d want to kill me, but I’d run that team into the ground...

Author: By Brenda Lee, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: LOVE IT OR LEEVE IT: Passion, Pain in Red Sox Nation | 4/7/2004 | See Source »

...Location, agents are not the buyers' friends--they shrewdly hide flaws in houses and connive to jack up the bids. Hosts Kirstie Allsopp and Phil Spencer help their clients play hardball in negotiating (an operatic conflict the U.S. shows inexplicably ignore). This is probably a cultural difference; the American shows are much sunnier about the market as a benevolent force. Not that Location's buyers and their families are necessarily innocent either. One buyer's sister persuades her not to bid on a prospective house because, we learn, Sis wants the place for herself. Backbiting relatives, subterfuge and money squabbles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: This Old Money Gusher | 4/5/2004 | See Source »

...desperadoes trying in vain to restore the old regime. But the Fallujah killings blasted a hole in the administration's standard explanations for ongoing violence in Iraq. The mob that danced around the charred bodies of the four Americans were very ordinary looking young Iraqis, making no effort to hide their identity despite the presence of numerous cameras - not exactly the behavior of Baathists or foreigners plotting furtively in the shadows. But then, Fallujah's insurgents have never had to skulk in the shadows. In February, for example, in the most audacious attack of the entire insurgency, they overran...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why the Killings in Fallujah Resonate with Americans | 4/2/2004 | See Source »

...people who live here have a well-deserved affection for the state's yawning prairie land, framed by mountains and speckled with elk, antelope and mule deer. Wyoming's biggest city is Cheyenne, the capital, which is still not serviced by jet liners. "It's very hard to hide in Wyoming," says Joe Moore, head of Wyoming's office of homeland security, on my first morning in town. "By the end of the day, everyone will know you're here...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Safe Are We?: How We Got Homeland Security Wrong | 3/29/2004 | See Source »

Matt Brunnig doesn’t want you to read this. He didn’t want it written and if being 6’7 didn’t make it impossible, he’d try to hide from any additional spotlight...

Author: By Timothy J. Mcginn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: BASEBALL 2004: Pretty Fly for a Shy Guy | 3/25/2004 | See Source »

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