Word: aute
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...larger part is that for all of their faults and failures of imagination, government officials are not aut??ats, responsible to no one but themselves. Of course, there are exceptions, arrogant men who think they are moving and shaking creation and will be interrupted only by death. But most officials need allies: most recognize their responsibility to account to the public and to answer reasonable inquires: they can always be got at via the Congress, the press, or a word to a well-placed friend; the s???? cated and experienced know that influence comes and goes, that those...
Body, thing, white mountain lying in the way of food. Breathing, taking up air and space in Merilee's place. Swayback oh yes and I remember a hard ?aut tummy down there underneath and a nail blam blam lovely one and stubby thighs, trunks of trees, white elephant thighs. "Sure as your ass is brown," she said, butting her nose at the hard bone where his bottom began, and then she kissed kissed kissed there lightly, a sparrow pecking...
...Snow's need to have him in a particular place at a particular moment in order to function as a fictional forward observer. It is an excessively willful way to construct fiction, but perfectly in keeping with the motto on Lord Snow's coat of arms: Aut inveniam viam aut faciam-"I shall either find a way or make...
...Front (Frente), a fragile union of five organizations that held much the same point of view as their "coordinator," Manuel Antonio (Tony) Varona, 52-that "the need for agrarian reform in Cuba is a myth." The land expropriated by Castro, says Varona, onetime head of the old-line Auténtico Party, should be returned to its original owners except for "about 15%" that is not productive. Later, another organization came to the CIA's attention: the People's Revolutionary Movement (M.R.P.), led and founded by Manuel ("Manolo") Ray,* 36, a soft-spoken engineer whose talent for organization...
...importance, it lasts so short a time"). "Careful assessment of the Library's needs," Buck writes tonelessly, "indicated that other calls upon unrestricted money deserved a higher priority." And, he explains, it would be difficult to find an "adequate substitute" for the Bulletin's retiring editor, Leonard Cottrell. Aut Cottrell aut nullus, it seems...