Word: hatefulness
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...other hand, if war erupts anew, the Arabs might embargo either the U.S. or all Western nations. Says Saudi Interior Minister Prince Fahd, 53, who is Faisal's brother and likely successor: "We would hate to impose another embargo. But in a war, when you feel you are in danger of dying, you may do anything. If war breaks out again, it will be not only the Arabs and Israelis who are damaged, but the world as a whole." If Western Europe were embargoed now, it would draw down its stockpiles (good for 60 days or more in each country...
...name of the Lord," whereupon two bears came out of the woods and tore them apart. More immediate for Christians are the troubling "dark sayings" of Jesus like his warning that "I have not come to bring peace but a sword." One dire command is that a disciple must "hate his own father and mother and wife and children." Literal readings of such passages can lead to such mindless zealotry as that of the Children...
...Amoeba. A few samples of his listener-grabbing gambits make clear why stations buzz Bennett. In a rating battle with another station in New Orleans, he played The Blue Danube Waltz every hour, just before the other station's newscast. "After a while," he explains, "people began to hate The Blue Danube and switch over to the other station. But when they did, all they heard was news. At the end of 30 days, most of the kids in town thought our competition was an all-news station." In Pine Bluff, Ark., figuring he could do just as Welles...
...smashing victory. This is pleasantly refreshing, since one would expect that after repressive military rule, the people would turn to the left. Instead, they proved that they are among the most politically sophisticated people in the world. Their message could not be clearer: as much as they fear and hate a military dictatorship, they fear and hate a Communist takeover more...
...expect him to belt out anything as simple as "the Catholics hate the Protestants and the Protestants hate the Catholics." Between the surrealistic "song of trunks" and his ode to overdue library books, Misch seems about as far removed from the mainstream as a comedian can get--and still be funny...