Word: killingly
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...other piece, by Smith Professor of Law Martha L. Minow and Amos N. Guiora of Case Western University, was written as a reaction to a failed attempt by the U.S. military to kill Ayman al-Zawahri, Osama bin Laden’s top deputy, in Pakistan earlier this month...
...German decision to free these killers to kill again that strengthened [former Israeli Prime Minister] Golda Meir’s resolve to take steps necessary to protect her citizens,” Dershowitz wrote...
...professors began by stating that the attack in Pakistan—which did not kill al-Zawahri but killed several al Qaeda operatives and at least 13 civilians—could damage the U.S.’s reputation and its interests in the region...
...vicious scorpion’s tail on a grander scale—and affix the giant hinged metal contraption atop a dune buggy. The result is something out of Real World/Road Rules Challenge, with the scorpion-tail dune buggy chasing around smaller dune buggies in the “kill zone” in an attempt to pop the large balloons attached to the smaller buggies. It’s complicated.Martinez sported a light pink polo shirt for most of the show, and—along with a female engineer from California—dominated the episode in terms...
...seldom and mainly as boilerplate or spin. Until the 1980s, there had been just over a dozen in two centuries. The President's basic legislative weapon, after all, is the veto power given him by the founders. He can use the power as leverage to affect legislation or kill it. But he cannot legislate himself or interpret the law counter to Congress's intent. Signing statements were therefore relatively rare instances of presidential nuance or push-back. In eight years, Ronald Reagan used signing statements to challenge 71 legislative provisions, and Bill Clinton...