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Word: ille (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...addition to feeling physically ill, I was hurt. I felt the way Kevin from "Home Alone" must have felt when his sister said, "Kevin, you're such a disease...

Author: By Aparna Sridhar, | Title: Sympathy Strikes | 3/19/1999 | See Source »

...first men: 'Few will give but Bones men, and they care far more for their society than they do for the college....' "Year by year the deadly evil is growing. The society was never as obnoxious to the college as it is today, and it is just this ill-feeling that shuts the pockets of non-members. Never before has it shown such arrogance and self-fancied superiority. It grasps the college press and endeavors to rule it all. It does not deign to show its credentials, but clutches at power with the silence of conscious guilt...

Author: By Susana E. Canseco, | Title: Public and Private: A Look at Princeton and Yale's Exclusive Clubs | 3/18/1999 | See Source »

...Duffell displayed the form that has made him a consistent threat throughout his career and showed none of the ill effects of surgery that limited his strength at times last season...

Author: By Daniel G. Habib, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Baseball Opens Season with Pair of Doubleheader Splits | 3/16/1999 | See Source »

...just going to go out of business," says Pisa, who got a letter from American Airlines demanding $16,000 for stolen tickets written on her ticket stock. The airline later relented because Pisa had followed recommended security guidelines. But Georgette Bouland-Anthe, a travel agent in Libertyville, Ill., who lost 6,000 blank tickets to the ring and owes the airlines $300,000, was forced to close her seven-year-old Travel Incentives Inc. "The airlines want payment," says Bouland-Anthe. "I am trying to get my nerves back in order after being in this business 20 years and having...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hot Ticket: The Airlines' First-Class Problem | 3/15/1999 | See Source »

...captives, then feigned an asthma attack and was let go. Deanja Walther, 26, a Swiss flight attendant who speaks French, stayed with the English-speaking hostages even though the Hutus let the French-speaking tourists remain at the camp. Walther, who last September was supposed to work aboard the ill-fated Swissair Flight 111, was ultimately spared. Some of the terrified survivors left the park on a plane flown by Ross, who had to start its engine with a pocketknife...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Uganda, Vacation Dreams Turn to Nightmares | 3/15/1999 | See Source »

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