Word: dares
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Washington in the mid-term election. Says a top labor official in Washington: "We don't like what we hear, but there's not much we can do about it. I think that the expression we will be hearing the most on the Hill will be: 'I don't dare take a chance. Look at what happened to Dick Clark.' " A liberal Senator from Iowa, Clark went down to unexpected defeat at the hands of a tax-and-spending-weary electorate. However tough the fight may he, to cut Government spending, the President appears to have the voters behind...
...think any Arab would dare do this because he would confront personal harassment without any benefits at this moment. The man who would do this would risk his life. I don't think the Arabs in Jerusalem will dare do something for which they don't get approval at least from countries like Jordan or Egypt...
...important, the President has sworn to reduce the deficit for fiscal 1980 to $30 billion. To the dismay of some liberal advisers, he told an October meeting of Cabinet members and the White House staff that "my political future" depends on redeeming that pledge, which meant that nobody should dare bring him ideas for new programs...
This means that if the South African government is pressed for cash, Manufacturers Hanover will obligingly give them all the time they need to repay their loans. Surely the bank could insist that the government repay on schedule--the government would not dare default. Yet Manufacturers Hanover, rather than putting pressure on the apartheid regime by withholding loans, helps that regime out of a tight spot--a role that U.S. banks have played for far too long in South Africa. The University claims to oppose such behavior by banks--yet now we find members of the Corporation trying to justify...
...solitary, Lillo eats alone, exercises under guard in isolated areas and is kept away from other convicts. Even so, he has developed a bad case of the shakes. He is suspicious of his guards and does not even dare turn for comfort to the prison chaplain. One reason is omerta, the Mafia oath of silence. Another is the fact that Dellacroce, in one of his favorite disguises, likes to don a clerical collar and go about as "Father O'Neill" (a play on a common mispronunciation of his first name). Lillo has no yearning for the last rites, least...