Word: neos
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Balsekar fell behind early but came back to win, 4-9, 9-3, 9-2, 9-7, to run her record to 2-1 since returning. The three wins marked the only bright spots for Harvard on Sunday. Sophomores Katherine O’Donnell, Johanna Snyder, Charlene Neo, and Sandra Mumanachit, along with freshman Alexandra Zindman, all lost in straight sets. Freshman No. 1 June Tiong dropped a competitive four set match to the Tigers’ Amanda Siebert, 9-6, 7-9, 9-0, 9-2. PENN 5, HARVARD 4Deadlocked at three matches apiece heading into the deciding three...
...Hopefully I’ll turn things around by the Howe Cup in a couple of weeks and we will get them back.” Sophomore No. 4 Johanna Snyder lost a heartbreaker 3-2, concluding in a tightly-contested 5-9 fifth set. Sophomore No. 8 Charlene Neo also fell 3-2 to end a streak of 4 consecutive victories. Freshmen No. 2 Alisha Mashruwala and No. 5 Bethan Williams fell in straight sets 3-0 to record their first losses on the season. Freshman No. 1 June Tiong fell 3-1 to Lauren Polonich, who is ranked...
...international law. But more recently French public opinion softened as family members mounted an energetic communications offensive arguing the suspects' innocence. Television scenes of Chadian riot police keeping furious crowds from the accused, meanwhile, have also raised some French fears over their safety - a concern Chadians have denounced as neo-colonial. Elsewhere, some onlookers - including French officials working for the return of the six to France - remain troubled by the lack of remorse or real avowal of wrongdoing by Zoé's Ark leaders, who have said their only error was in being misled by a local contact who swore...
...initiate a federal-level investigation. The Hamburg officials are hoping that in 2008 or 2009 a process will be initiated that will result in a federal ban on the organization, potentially freezing its assets and outlawing fundraising and recruitment - restrictions similar to those that apply to several neo-Nazi organizations...
...book has almost that many plots. Basically, it involves a Dutch cognitive psychologist, Paul Andermans, who is doing research at the University of Potsdam in 1995. After a violent run-in with those neo-Nazis, he recovers at a hospital in nearby Berlin. There he meets Jozef de Heer, an Auschwitz survivor who persuades Andermans to write down his life story, a gripping tale of escape and betrayal in the wartime German capital. Like nearly everyone in the book, De Heer isn't what he seems. Neither is Paul Goldfarb, a Nobel-prizewinning physicist who fled Nazi Germany to help...