Word: narrowed
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...family misses another sound: the ka-ching! of money. For years the Yazegi Group had a captive market of 1.48 million Palestinians living in the narrow coastal strip of Gaza. Captive, unfortunately, is the right word because the Israelis, who are contending daily with rocket-firing Palestinian militants, have destroyed the airport and harbor and keep Gaza's inhabitants behind a concrete-and-barbed-wire fence that is 25 miles (40 km) long. Gaza has one entry and exit point, which the Israelis strictly control. Gazans refer to their overcrowded enclave without too much exaggeration as "the world's largest...
...questions themselves proved the stupidity of conducting debates on such narrow premises. The moderators asked Giuliani: “To what do you attribute the declining of support among Hispanics to Republicans?” They asked Romney: “Why has the Hispanic support for Republicans declined?” And they asked Thompson: “What are you going to do—what can you offer to recover the lost ground among Hispanics?” The candidates duly recited their talking points, and assured the moderators that they didn’t hate Hispanics...
...this concept can be applied to other diseases as well. “We’re not talking about one particular narrow disease, but a way for a doctor to look at a whole person as a whole person,” Church said...
...tournament, as the men’s top five have only dropped one match total this entire season. In all of Harvard’s contests this year, the top five have won key matches for the team. This was especially the case during last Saturday’s narrow 5-4 victory over Cornell. Look for the Crimson to send juniors Verdi DiSesa, Niko Hrdy, Ned Reeves, sophomore Colin West, and freshman J. Reed Endresen to represent their team at the tournament.—VINCENT R. OLETUThe Harvard men’s and women’s track...
...controversial reform, Chavez still has many of the poor on his side. The electoral council has yet to release detailed results that would indicate how impoverished areas voted. But an abstention rate of 44% suggests some of Chavez's traditional support base didn't show up to vote. And, narrow as the vote count was, the rejection of his proposal only one year after he won reelection by a margin of over 20% raises the possibility that abstention was compounded by some supporters actually voting no. If, as interviews in Caracas this week suggest, more people in barrios disagree with...