Word: worldã
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...Yasser Arafat is if he’s still alive—was, if it’s in the past tense—the world??s most notorious terrorist, a man who not only practiced but preached killing as a way of life,” Wisse said...
...result of his entertainment novels and popular readership, Greene’s well-known love of traveling to seek out the world??s victims degenerated to a process that was simply performed to keep pace with his growing reputation. He was now expected to go on these political trips...
More specifically, a gigantic, enormous, gargantuan crossword. Tiao is the proud owner of one “World??s Largest Crossword,” a massive tapestry of downs and acrosses with over 28,000 clues. The seven-by-seven foot puzzle, which hangs on a wall in Tiao’s room in Weld Hall, was a high school graduation gift. As Tiao explains, “My friend was flying home from MIT’s freshman weekend and saw this puzzle in the Skymall catalog.” (In other news, Tiao?...
...Barely even recognizable as a crossword, it makes for an interesting piece of art and a great conversation piece. “It’s what decorates our room,” says roommate Kelly Chan ’08. But owning your very own “World??s Largest Crossword” has its downsides...
Rumsfeld was lying, or at least bending the truth. The Bush administration has long held—much to the dismay of the world??that militants fighting for international terror organizations such as Al Qaeda, are unlawful combatants, and thus not subject to the protections of any international agreements. Indeed, of the dozen non-Iraqis removed from Iraq, all of them reportedly had links to terror groups or had entered Iraq after the invasion in March 2003 to engage in terror or aid the insurgency. But defining fighters as unlawful combatants is a slippery slope to descend...