Word: jungly
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...crown prince. But history and real life show that it is all too possible. Others with a penchant for conspiracy theories will not accept the certainties that come from a straightforward expose of the facts. The legacy of the Prince of Darkness will trouble Nepal in the future. MITHUN JUNG Kathmandu...
...energy proposals, the results have been mixed. The spy-plane incident with China ended well, but in its early stages Bush was unsteady. Breaking off nonproliferation talks with North Korea, he contradicted his own Secretary of State and seemed dismissive of South Korea President Kim Dae Jung's Nobel Peace-prizewinning efforts at reconciliation with the North. Most of all, he infuriated allies across Europe by abruptly announcing that the U.S. would withdraw from the Kyoto Protocol on climate change. Bush had promised a "humble foreign policy," but as far as Europe was concerned, he delivered the opposite...
...Freeny, Rachel S.C. Friedman, Kimberlee R. Garris, Jamie H. Ginott, Rebecca P. Gogel, Jennifer L. Gooden, Alexander H. Gourevitch, Elizabeth A. Greenwood, Nicholas R. Guydosh, Bilqis B. Hijjas, Susannah L. Hollister, Justin E. Howell, Katherine Huang, Inga-britt C. Hunter, Radu P. Iovita, Sarah E. Kennedy, Humayun Khalid, Hoon-Jung Kim, Joshua N. Lambert, Robert A. Lauridsen, Courtney H. Leimkuhler, Paula R. Levy, Sarah E. Lewis, Jie Li, Jennifer L. Liu, Patrick P. Liu, James B. Lounsbury, Rochelle K. Mackey, Luba T. Mandzy, Adam G.W. Matthews, Emily O. Matthews, Zoe B. McKee, Marianne E. McPherson, Gabriel Mendlow, Paul M. Monteleoni...
...allegedly had not: strengthen America's alliances for the vital tasks ahead. So how can one explain Bush adviser Condoleezza Rice's disclosure, even before the inauguration, that the U.S. might pull its troops out of the Balkans? Or the new President's telling South Korean President Kim Dae Jung that the U.S. was not going to continue talks with North Korea, seemingly undermining Seoul's "Sunshine Policy" toward Pyongyang? What about the snub to Europeans and the rest of the world when Washington pronounced the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change dead? Or the insistent push forward on missile defense...
...delegation that he will maintain a ban on missile tests until 2003 and would agree to a second summit with South Korea. The commitments were announced by Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson, the first Western leader to visit North Korea. In Seoul, South Korean President Kim Dae Jung praised the E.U. delegation for "playing the role of a messenger of peace...