Word: wolfs
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...recall Bush's statements on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, which turned out to be far from truthful. In the case of Haiti, I accept the U.S. version of events but wish I were able to do so without thinking of the boy who cried wolf. No one believes a liar, even when he is telling the truth. Andrew Thorne Dahlenburg, Germany...
...squad of bucktoothed renegades in Washington started toppling cherry trees along the Tidal Basin, putting at risk the annual Cherry Blossom Festival. (When the National Park Service relocated the colony to an undisclosed location, then Idaho Congresswoman Helen Chenoweth, a die-hard foe of reintroducing the wolf and grizzly in the West, demanded the Tidal Basin be declared "habitat critical to its well-being and survival" and the return of the beavers...
...Houghton Library of Rare Books presents the third concert in their chamber music series. For their March performance, British baritone Christopher Maltman sings a variety of pieces, including Purcell, Gurney, Butterworth, Lowe, and Wolf. The concerts, all held in the library, are also intended to give the concertgoers a chance at intermission to get a glimpse of some of the amazing books Harvard has in its libraries, from a first edition of Mao’s Little Red Book to Goethe’s thesis. Tickets $20 regular, $10 students. 8 p.m. Edison and Newman Room, Houghton Library...
...letters grousing about the state of French society and warning that it had planted bombs along the nation's rail lines and at two other unidentified vulnerable targets. Officials say they were instructed to communicate with the group via personal ads in a newspaper, using the code name "Big Wolf" for AZF and "Suzy" for the ministry. A day after officials posted one such ad, they received the GPS coordinates of a sophisticated bomb that had been planted along a line in central France, which ballistics experts detonated...
...cuts, while the economy tries to survive the impact of enormous deficits on interest rates and American credit. The future is when we face the consequences of living in an international community where pre-emptive war is a familiar doctrine of international relations, with America notorious for crying wolf. And the consensus of the scientific community is that the future is endangered by today’s fuel emissions. Just to be clear, I don’t mean the flying-cars, food-in-a-pill future; on average, most of these looming disasters will land on us right about...