Word: sri
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...other way while Hamas and the Islamic Jihaad geared up for fresh terrorist attacks. In a rare interview, Israeli military intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Moshe Yaalon warned today that more attacks against Israelis will be in store over the next couple of days unless Arafat, currently traveling in Sri Lanka, directly forbids the bombings from taking place. But Arafat is not in an accomodating mood. "He can't tell me what to do," he snapped, scoffing at an exortation by foreign policy advisor Dore Gold that he return to Israel to deal with Palestinian extremists. While Arafat was staying...
...perhaps, although the answer depends largely on how patient you are and how much risk you can stomach. Foreign stocks, especially those traded in hinterlands such as Sri Lanka and Pakistan, are notoriously volatile. But such budding markets also promise far faster growth than anything the silver-haired domestic economy is likely to muster, presenting the tantalizing possibility of such stocks rising an average 20% to 30% a year over long periods. So far, no large schools of U.S. investors are swimming overseas. A vicious bear market that clipped emerging-market stocks by 30% or more in 1994 remains...
DIED. JUNIUS JAYEWARDENE, 90, former President of Sri Lanka, whose reforms helped launch its economy but whose inability to stop a civil war has brought the country to a crash and cost it 50,000 lives so far; in Colombo...
...theories of faith healing have survived only because they can be rationalized on their own terms against all manner of objections: they can never be refuted. But none of this is to say that we can do without faith. CARLO FONSEKA, Dean Faculty of Medicine University of Kelaniya Ragama, Sri Lanka...
...mission in one breath. I learned that only last month from an article by an English writer named John Hargreaves in Hemispheres, the United Airlines magazine. Although the word kabaddi is used for the chant in most of the world, Hargreaves wrote, "in Nepal this is 'Do-Do,' in Sri Lanka 'Guddo,' in Malaysia 'Chaddo-Guddo,' and in Indonesia 'Techib.'" Imagine appearing before the Olympic committee to argue acceptance for a game in which players constantly...