Word: suspectedly
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...politicians full of fresh anger about how the U.S. is conducting the war on terror: not just old complaints about Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib, but new ones about cia "black sites" in Europe that allegedly house secret prisoners, and an active program of shuttling captured terrorist suspects around using European airports. Some European countries are investigating exactly what the U.S. has been up to on their territory. E.U. officials are threatening dire punishments for any country that has abetted Washington. The issue is raw. There is cause for anger: after Sept. 11, 2001, Vice President Dick Cheney said...
...back of the plane) have also spent 48 days on the island—but they only get an hour to talk about their tale! Get it—tail? Tale? When multiple people are taken by The Others, Ana Lucia smells a rat, and throws her suspect (Nathan) into that same pit she threw Michael, Jin, and Sawyer. Only problem is, she has the wrong guy! Oh, snap! An evil fellow named “Goodwin” actually conned everyone into thinking he was one of them. He led them right to The Others, and once she finds...
...Does this taste like what human flesh would taste like?’” According to Nuckols, it did. Since an early age, Nuckols has been fascinated with the idea of sampling human meat, and he believes that most are as well. “I suspect there is an inner cannibal within us all,” he says. FM decided to investigate this theory by conducting a Hufu taste test. The Cabot Dining Hall chefs volunteered to sautee—as per Nuckols’ instructions—and taste test the manmade delicacy. All three...
...succeeded in turning a single cell from the ear of an Afghan hound into a genetically identical puppy. Hwang was back in the news last week when he admitted lying about the source of some of the human eggs used in an earlier stem-cell experiment. Nevertheless, many scientists suspect the techniques Hwang perfected to clone a dog could be adapted to duplicate almost any species--including a primate...
...reason is that this was the first episode in Rowling?s series to feel too long; I suspect that the unique popularity of the earlier novels had intimidated her editors and petrified their blue pencils. Whatever the reason, Goblet consumed 734 pages, more than the length of the first two books combined. It was a challenge for kids not just to read the book but to lift it. (Isometric exercises for fifth graders?) Rowling took the first 100 pages to describe just two main scenes: a fleeting glimpse of arch-villain Voldemort and his abettors, and the Quidditch World...