Word: hungered
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...Washington Post and the Times of London that accused the Metropolitan Police and local governments of a moral failure for not closing the two roads adjacent to the embassy. Russian Countess Anca Vidaeff, who lived across from the embassy's side entrance, even held a three-day hunger strike to protest what she claimed was inadequate security. "My property is my pension but I cannot rent or sell my house and my life is in danger," she told the press...
North Koreans are, unfortunately, no strangers to hunger. In the 1990s, a severe famine is thought to have left up to a million North Koreans dead. Though aid workers say the country is not facing a full-blown famine, the shortage appears to be the worst food crisis since the 1990s. Erica Kang, director of the Seoul-based human-rights group Good Friends, says a "few hundred thousand people are in danger or at risk of famine" in North Korea. Marcus Noland, an expert on the North Korean economy at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, believes that...
...time.”Grossman said that the architecture of a successful nonprofit is in many ways the same as a for-profit company. In both realms, executives need to identify their mission, develop a focused strategy, and build an efficient organizational structure.“Ending world hunger is a noble pursuit, but results can be difficult to measure unless you have a definite plan,” Grossman said. “Having been a CEO in both the nonprofit and the for-profit world, I think that it is harder to construct good nonprofit organizations than...
...their own piece of a title. “With us not being there last year, when they won the Ivy League title...we’re still a little bit, I mean, the whole team’s hungry, but we bring that little extra bit of hunger,” Brenton says. “You know, you guys won last year, that’s cool, I love that, but I got to get mine too. So we bring that extra intensity.” “You know, obviously we weren’t playing...
...Hajj penned thousands more words during years as Prisoner 345 -including accounts of being force-fed through a tube during months of a hunger strike; of being locked in a cage for two weeks with no toothbrush or soap, after guards found an iron nail outside his cell window; and of being placed in a single cell with no blanket or bed, after refusing to submit to vaccinations he had already received in Qatar. Asked to comment on these claims, U.S. Navy Commander Jeffrey D. Gordon on Wednesday told TIME that Al-Hajj had "routinely made baseless assertions that...