Word: chiles
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Importance of Being Earnest--8:00 Footholds--8:00 Jean Cocteau--8:30 Paul Robeson--8:00 Chile, Chile--Caravan Theatre at 7 and 9:30 Sleuth--8:30 Taming of the Shrew--Boston Shakespeare at 8 The Reason We Eat--8:08 Outside the Door--8:00 The Outcast--8:00 Forbidden Fruits--7:30 The Indian Wants The Bronx...
...Kissinger in China, Oh, it's Kissinger in Cairo, Kissinger at Nato In the grand old power game. But the white bones of Allende Tell another darker story, Oh you never got to Chile, But you killed it just the same...
...undergraduate attending a review section for a long neglected course. But a closer look at the terse phrases scratched out on the page belies the first impression: the hand of a man in power has penned these notes, judging from their contents. "One in 10 chance perhaps, but save Chile!" reads the first line, setting the tenor for the next eight phrases. The author's adrenalin flowing fast now, the notes cease to even resemble coherent sentences: "not concerned risks involved," "$10,000,000 available, more if necessary," "full-time job--best men we have." And then suddenly...
...accounts for the unusual delay in the resolution of an otherwise routine perjury investigation. Attorney General Griffin Bell has taken the extraordinary step of consulting President Carter on the case, reasoning that an unprecedented trial of a former intelligence chief might expose details of the CIA's operations in Chile and other national security materials relating to the Allende years. To complicate the decision facing Bell and the Carter administration, Helms reportedly told Justice Department investigators in 1974 that he would name Kissinger as the Nixon administration official who ordered Helms to perjure himself before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee...
...eating a lunch of his wife's renowned chile con carne. While he finished his meal, she proudly showed TIME Correspondent Philip Taubman around the elegant three-story house in fashionable Georgetown. She had made the draperies herself. Later that January day, the newcomers to Washington talked about how their lives had been magically transformed. They made no effort to conceal their excitement. "I can tell already," said LaBelle Lance, "we're going to like Washington." Bert Lance was quick to agree: "This is the biggest thrill of my life...