Word: three-day
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...women’s team finished fifth out of six Ivy squads. Yale dominated the tournament, finishing 17 strokes ahead of second-place Princeton. Princeton’s Avery Kiser won the individual portion of the tournament by 10 strokes, shooting 73-76-77 for a three-day total of 10-over...
...while Blair will publicly back Bush, he comes to the three-day visit far more tentative about replacing Saddam Hussein than he was about the Taliban; polling shows his domestic audience is even more nervous. Instead, Blair and European leaders who hope he will talk some sense into the warlike Bush want to work through the U.N. to reinsert weapons inspectors kicked out in 1998. But unless they get untrammeled access, which is unlikely, Washington will almost certainly veto the deal as a dangerous charade. If the Europeans don't go along with whatever military action the U.S. takes...
What is terrorism? The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) was unable to define it during their three-day meeting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia this week. Neglecting, for the moment, most Arab nations’ cowardly reluctance to condemn the suicide bombers, it is nonetheless easy to understand why the OIC felt little pressing need to give a definition to terror. If the Bush Administration, which declared the war against terrorism, has failed miserably to provide a definition for its war, why should anyone else step up to bat? This is, the Arab nations rightly implied, the United States?...
...late February, India experienced a paroxysm of violence between Hindus and Muslims. A group of Muslims in the western state of Gujarat burned 58 Hindus alive on a train. In response, Hindus went on a three-day rape, pillage and murder rampage that claimed the lives of 427 people. It was the worst violence between the two communities since riots in Bombay in 1993 claimed 800 lives...
...while Blair will publicly back Bush, he comes to the three-day visit far more tentative about replacing Saddam Hussein than he was about the Taliban; polling shows his domestic audience is even more nervous. Instead, Blair and European leaders who hope he will talk some sense into the warlike Bush want to work through the U.N. to reinsert weapons inspectors kicked out in 1998. But unless they get untrammeled access, which is unlikely, Washington will almost certainly veto the deal as a dangerous charade. If the Europeans don't go along with whatever military action the U.S. takes...