Word: angered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...core course, Lit and Arts B-34, “Frank Lloyd Wright and the Modern City and Suburb.” Professor Levine is exceptionally anal about letting his students out exactly on time, which is great, and almost begins to make up for his extreme outbursts of anger at the innocent slide projector man whenever the images are out of focus. Because the HAA department is so small—or, more likely, because it’s so disorganized—you won’t be getting an advisor. If the stars happen to align...
...north end of the site - now a construction area for the Freedom Towers, scheduled for completion in 2012 - throngs of people gathered to express anger over the Bush Administration?s policy in the Middle East, or to support it. "I went to a mosque in Brooklyn once and I didn?t see one flag, I didn?t see any remorse, they told me Bush did it all," said Joe Arlak, 46 who backs President Bush. "We need to stop dividing as a country and get behind our commander-in-chief." Arlak argued with Joe Lias, 40, who said...
...from Muslim countries in the Middle East and elsewhere. In addition to discrimination at home, the arrogant foreign policies of most Western countries produce a sense of injustice among many Muslims who believe they have no proper recourse-politically, socially or economically. The resulting sense of powerlessness breeds anger that finds its way into extremism, violence and terrorism. Instead of blaming Islam, look at the root causes of the boiling anger and remove them. Only then will we feel safe. Bashy Quraishy Chief Editor, MediaWatch Copenhagen...
...jail," says Shukria Barakzai, a member of Afghanistan's parliament and a Karzai ally. "The walls are so high that he has become distant from his own nation." That helps explain why, as hope fades and parts of the country drift into lawlessness, Afghans have started to direct their anger toward Karzai himself...
...immediate aftermath, along with the shock and the anger, there was a true feeling of coming together and solidarity: neighbors helping neighbors, friends helping friends, strangers helping strangers. All the dividing lines, none of that mattered. Our great challenge, I think, is to keep those positive aspects of civic unity alive. I do think people remember how we were able to come together when we needed to, and I think that resonates on this fifth anniversary. It reminds us of our goodness, our heroism, and our capacity for compassion...