Word: warne
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...planned to fire," he said. But when the shelling of Qana began, Time Beirut bureau chief Lara Marlowe heard a U.N commander radio a panicked Fijian soldier that headquarters had asked Israel to stop the bombardment. The firing continued. Only after several minutes of shelling did Israel officially warn the U.N. it was was targeting Qana. Yet in an interview with TIME on Friday, Israeli Foreign Minister Ehud Barak, former chief of staff, insisted the troops had been very careful. "It's hard to say right now, with the dead bodies of these innocent victims in front...
...after an increase of nearly five percent last year. "The government is trying to get doctors to change the long-established mentality that as long as the government is paying for it, we might as well prescribe something," Crumley says. "This will make people think before acting." Some doctors warn that this is a step toward managed care that would eventually lead to reduced services for patients. Crumley disputes that contention. "The system won't be as generous, but it can't be," Crumley says. "It will however be generous by American standards. The quality of care...
...presiding over the case, will hold a hearing to rule on a defense request that the government turn over a mountain of classified information that was gathered right after the blast. Jones says he needs to see all the data the government gathered about possible foreign terrorist involvement. Prosecutors warn that granting the request could delay the trial for years. In the immediate aftermath of the bombing, every intelligence officer and law-enforcement agent in the U.S. and around the world was checking up on groups under their surveillance. The information pipeline to Washington was clogged with tips leading nowhere...
...going on," says Kruno. In fact, Bosnian Serb nationalists, backed by the Yugoslav army, were firing the first shots in their campaign to divide the newly independent Bosnia along ethnic lines. By April 6, Kruno continues, word went out that people should report to work, though friends called to warn of roadblocks manned by ominous-looking civilians with stockings over their faces. "But some people who took the tram that day did not know," he says. "Many were never heard of again...
This latest attack led industry watchers to warn that the infighting could become suicidal. "This has exploded out of control," says Paul Kelly, president of Silvermine Consulting in Westport, Connecticut, which advises consumer-products companies. "Sooner or later people are going to get concerned about the whole category [of pain-killers] and stay away." There is, in fact, no real cause for such consumer concerns...