Word: buildings
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...middle of kitchen sits a meat grinder, a perfectly normal meat grinder with a lot of perfectly normal ground meat coming out of it. The only abnormal thing is that there's so damn much of it: at least 150 pounds or so, enough meat to build your own cow. Too much meat...
...could recite a mean Hail Mary, and the other people were just the other way around. Paco couldn't hack it, because he knew all along that the only reason these other people tolerated the rich kid was that his father built tanks. Paco's father didn't build tanks, and Paco wasn't sure he liked the idea of staking his future at Ropes and Gray on anything as shaky as his tenuous link to the military-industrial complex...
...Workers of my country," he said, "I have faith in Chile and her destiny. Other men will overcome this dark and bitter moment when treason seems to dominate. You must never forget that sooner or later grand avenues will be opened where free men will march on to build a better society. Long live Chile! Long live the people! Long live the workers! These are my last words, and I am certain the sacrifice will not be in vain...
Lance stoutly defends his aggressive method of handling his financial affairs. "The only way you can build an estate is by borrowing money and working at it," he says. "A lot of people would say they weren't willing to take those risks, and a conservative fellow wouldn't take that sort of risk. I was willing...
...first film since Rocky, Sylvester Stallone, 30, plays a union organizer during the '30s through '50s who battles politicians and corporate executives for the rights of the workingman. The title: F.I.S.T. (Federation of Interstate Truckers), the union that Stallone's character, Johnny Kovak, helps build. "Kovak came off the streets like Rocky did," observes Sylvester. "But this guy was born to be a champion." F.I.S.T. appealed to Stallone because of its "solid foundation." The story, he says, "has bones." Director Norman Jewison thinks it has another plus: a touch of that great Brando blockbuster On the Waterfront...