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Word: karim (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...Asani goes, there will be nothing left in Indian studies," said Mona Karim '93, adding that Asani not only teaches courses on South Asian languages but also a variety of courses on Indo-Muslim culture...

Author: By Beong-soo Kim, | Title: South Asian Instruction May Be Cut | 2/7/1991 | See Source »

...Karim said she wants to continue taking Urdu as an elective next year. "I'm very interested in the language," she said. "It's the language of my ancestors...

Author: By Beong-soo Kim, | Title: South Asian Instruction May Be Cut | 2/7/1991 | See Source »

...history offers some hope that Iraq will back down peacefully. The last Iraqi leader to threaten Kuwait, General Abdul Karim Qasim, found himself isolated internationally with mounting economic problems at home. By 1963, less than two years after laying claim to Kuwait, Qasim had been deposed and assassinated, and his successor had recinded Iraq's assertion of sovereignty over Kuwait. All without a shot being fired in the Gulf...

Author: By Edward Felsenthal, | Title: Bush's World Order is Not So New | 12/5/1990 | See Source »

...nearest he ever got to combat was assassination. As a student, he had joined the Baath Party, an underground anti-Western, pan-Arab socialist movement. The party put him on a team assigned to murder Iraq's military ruler, Abdul Karim Kassem. Saddam and his confederates sprayed Kassem's station wagon with machine-gun fire as it sped through downtown Baghdad, but they missed their target. Although bodyguards killed several of the assailants, Saddam escaped with a bullet in his left leg. In the glorified words of his own hagiography -- the truth is less dramatic -- he carved out the bullet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Saddam Hussein: Master Of His Universe | 8/13/1990 | See Source »

Saddam's first venture into subversive politics came in 1956 when, as a new member of the Baath Party, he participated in an abortive coup against King Faisal II. The task was completed two years later by military strongman Abdul Karim Kassem. When the Baathists fared no better under the new regime, Saddam was tapped by the party in 1959 to assassinate Kassem. That attempt also failed, but Saddam emerged a hero as stories circulated of how he had a companion dig a bullet from his leg with a penknife, then to Syria disguised as a Bedouin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iraq Sword of the Arabs | 6/11/1990 | See Source »

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