Internal sisemine 6. Agenda päevakord 59. Interpretation tõlgendus 7. Applicable rakendatav 60. Interstellar tähtedevaheline 8. Arbitrarily omavoliliselt 61. Intricate keerukas 9. Arcane kauge 62. Latency ooteaeg, viivitus 10. Artificial tehislik 63. Layout paigutus 11. Assailant kimbutaja 64. Lurk varitsus 12. Atrocity brutaalsus 65. Magnifying suurendav 13. Attest tunnistama 66. Malfunction talitushäire 14. Attrition ammendumine 67. Miserable haletsusväärne/vilets 15. Badge mark 68. Myriad tohutu hulk 16. Barely vaevu 69
Later, Othello tells Desdemona to wait for him in bed and to send Emilia away. Iago's plan is going as planned. Iago instructs Rodrigo to ambush Cassio, but Rodrigo misses his mark and Cassio wounds him instead. Iago wounds Cassio back and runs away. Othello hears Cassio's cry, assuming that Iago has killed him. Lodovico and Gratiano enter to see what the commotion is about. Iago enters shortly thereafter and flies into a pretend rage as he discovers Cassio's assailant Rodrigo, whom he murders. Cassio is taken to have his wound dressed. Meanwhile, Othello stands over his sleeping wife in their bedchamber, preparing to kill her. Desdemona wakes asserting her innocence, but Othello ignores her. Emilia enters with the news that Rodrigo is dead. Othello asks about Cassio, but Emilia says he is not. Othello tells her that he has killed Desdemona for her infidelity, which Iago brought to his attention. Montano,
Rosenthal asked the commis- sioner about a different Queens-based homicide, and the commissioner, thinking he was being questioned about the Genovese case, revealed something staggering that had been uncovered by the police investigation. It was something that left everyone who heard it, the commissioner included, aghast and grasping for expla- nations. Catherine Genovese had not experienced a quick, muffled death. It had been a long, loud, tortured, public event. Her assailant had chased and attacked her in the street three times over a period of 35 minutes before his knife finally silenced her cries for help. Incredibly, 38 of her neighbors watched from the safety of their apartment windows without so much as lifting a finger to call the police. Rosenthal, a former Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, knew a story when he heard one. On the day of his lunch with the commissioner, he assigned a reporter to investigate the "bystander angle" of the Genovese incident