Word: concealing
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...first step in doubtless a long series to come in the reclamation of John Huston for auleurists on the tenuous excuse of Fat City. Sarris has retreaded old hopes and arguments with new sources, struggled to keep interest in prevalent debates. But he hasn't managed to conceal the poverty of his film philosophy, of which even he seems to have tired...
...scatters them among dozens of committees. Against all odds, the nonprofit Citizens' Research Foundation, headed by Herbert E. Alexander, a political scientist, attempts an accounting each election year, based on voluntary disclosures made by candidates and statements filed. Such a system cannot ferret out those determined to conceal their gifts, but it does at least give an indication of what the honest men are up to. Herewith a necessarily incomplete gallery of top donors in this campaign through Aug. 31, prepared by TIME from the C.R.F.'s data...
...November 1971, Lavelle began to send his pilots North on "planned protective reaction" strikes against installations that Lavelle felt threatened the safety of his crews simply by their existence. The phrase is, of course, an Orwellian contradiction in terms, and the actions were clearly against regulations. To justify and conceal that fact, an entire double-accounting system grew up. Sergeant Lonnie Franks, who first blew the whistle on Lavelle, claimed that he and 200 other officers and enlisted men often made out and passed along two sets of reports on unauthorized missions. One was truthful, and was filed; the other...
...already selling well in New York, Atlanta and Chicago, and are expected to be one of the most popular styles this fall and winter-even for women whose less than perfect figures have until now kept them out of pants. Unlike jeans, which tend to reveal everything, palazzos conceal everything, even fat hips, skinny thighs and thick calves. "They give a gal who has something to hide the place to hide it," explains Francine Farkas of Alexander's department stores in New York City...
...Finally it dawned on me," he recalls. "I looked at Representative Irvis, and of course he already knew." A local lawyer volunteered to bring a suit in federal court, and Irvis, himself a lawyer, took his case to the state human rights commission. Lodge 107 made no effort to conceal its policy. "Refusal of service," the lodge admitted before the commission, "was because K. Leroy Irvis is a Negro...