Word: mar
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...them to understand when we say that the Oklahoma City incident was none of these things. Moreover, we introduce them to the tools of real murder, and expect them not to carry out the lessons they learned from their video games. Stories of children killing children far too often mar the front pages of national newspapers...
...person at Harvard of whom I'm certain. So I ask myself, do I really need to know what He looks like? Would I even want to know? After all, physical appearances could never transcend what Menu Man and I have together. I wouldn't want to mar the purity and innocence of our correspondence by subjecting it to the stain of superficiality. Besides, the enigma just adds to the sex appeal. It's not just the virile way He pronounces, "Moo Goo Gai Pan" that makes my stomach do flip-flops, it's the fact that...
...poisonous. No one was seriously injured. TIME Japan correspondent Irene Maciulis-Kunii said that some in Japan are even seeing this as the perfect terrorist attack: "You make your point, and nobody really gets hurt."Aum Shinri Kyo, the Japanese cult suspected in the Mar. 20nerve gas attackon Tokyo subways, immediately denied involvement. Police said they believe the attack differs enough from the one in Tokyo to be a copycat crime. People affected by the fumes today complained of stinging eyes, coughs and dizziness, but there were no reports of serious or life-threatening injuries...
...from the station.) Officials said sarin, the nerve gas used in the Tokyo attack, was not suspected because the victims' symptoms were different. People affected by the fumes today complained of stinging eyes, coughs and dizziness, but there were no reports of serious or life-threatening injuries. Curiously, on Mar. 5 -- two weeks before the Tokyo attack raised national alarm -- about a dozen passengers were taken to a hospital in Yokohama after they inhaled mysterious fumes in a train car. The source of the fumes was never found...
Nadeem Riaz, a suspect in the killings of American diplomatic personnel in Pakistan, was shot and killed today by police outside a home inKarachi. The FBI is in Karachi investigating the Mar. 8 killings of Jackie Van Landingham and Gary Durell, and the U.S. has offered a reward of up to $2 million for information leading to the arrest of the killers. A witness identified Riaz as one of the killers. However, sources in Karachi tell TIME Daily that the FBI has not confirmed that...