1. President Bush says nobody should expect that all violence will end in Iraq. He says U.S. and Iraqi forces are making progress fighting the insurgency. But the president said he would not set a timetable for permanently withdrawing U.S. troops.
2. Critics are calling Hurricane Katrina fraud a taxpayer assault. A top FEMA official defended the hurricane spending, saying the cases of fraud only represent a fraction of the overall assistance provided.
3. An Indiana man has been charged with murder after the body of one of his sons was found in a lake. Police say Katron Walker abducted his 2 boys at knifepoint and later stabbed them.
4. Dozens of Palestinian civil servants stormed a parliamentary session to demand their salaries. The crowd burst into the floor and threw water bottles and other small items at Hamas lawmakers. The parliament speaker was forced to leave the building.
WORDS IN THE NEWS
1. taxpayer : n-count Taxpayers are people who pay a percentage of their income to the government as tax.
2. at knifepoint : phrase If you are attacked or robbed at knifepoint, someone threatens you with a knife while they attack or steal from you. (JOURNALISM) e.g. A 15-year-old girl was attacked at knifepoint in a subway.
3. civil servant : n-count A civil servant is a person who works in the Civil Service in Britain and some other countries, or for the local, state, or federal government in the United States.
4. burst into : verb To burst into or out of a place means to enter or leave it suddenly with a lot of energy or force. e.g. Gunmen burst into his home and opened fire. = rush
5. floor : n-count The place where official debates and discussions are held, especially between members of parliament, is referred to as the floor. e.g. The issues were debated on the floor of the House.
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