Word: hates
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
NIXON: The...? Oh, fine, thank you, Barry, just fine. You know, I hate to be the first to get down to business, as it were, but I think we ought to get started on this topic of unity. As I see it, Barry and I differ not as a matter of ends, but of means. It's my opinion, and I mean this sincerely, that I have great respect for you, Barry. And I want to add that Pat does too. It's my feeling too, that the party should not be led by extremists of the right...
...Reds have taken to the hills. Every day the two forces meet in bloody, hand-to-hand combat, using rifles, knives, teeth and fingernails. It is because they have lived so close to one another that they fight so fiercely. No one excels Kazantzakis in portraying this love-hate ambivalence. In one memorable vignette, Kazantzakis tells how a group of Royalists and Reds shoot it out one winter's day in a ravine, and then, exhausted and wounded, huddle together for warmth as their lives...
Bitos commits a characteristic faux pas by appearing in full costume. This also attests the nature of the man, a small-minded, bloody-minded egotist, seething with inner fury and monumentally insecure, inflexible and prideful. Maxime and his friends hate Bitos for his lowly origins, for the brainy diligence that made him first in school and for the fanaticism with which he is hounding and executing wartime collaborationists...
Toilet-paper streamers festooned the trees. Strings of firecrackers chattered like machine guns. Signs were everywhere. SONS OF ERIN, UNITE! they said. RUB THEIR NOSES IN THE IRISH SOD! Sturdy young men stopped strangers, flashed their "Hate State!" buttons and inquired politely: "You wouldn't be a State man, now, would you?" South Bend, Ind., was no place for the faint of heart last week. Notre Dame, the No. 1 college football team in the nation, was taking on Archrival Michigan State?and the Fighting Irish were in a fighting mood...
Fowles's acknowledged mentor is the 6th century B.C. Greek thinker Heraclitus, whose extant work consists only of brief fragments declaring cryptically that the universe is in flux, that life is a ceaseless struggle of opposites: fire and water, earth and spirit, love and hate. Fowles shares Heraclitus' reverence for life, his clear-eyed contemplation of the tragic, his love of paradox; and he is even more eloquent...