Word: hauntingly
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...into his audiences' unsuspecting brains. Lacking both sides of the old boy's schizophrenic sensibility, Benton can do no more than offer a dispassionate mimicry of someone else's style. There are a few little scares in his film, but nothing to stir our dreams or haunt our memories...
...heavy losses suffered during the early '70s still haunt many investors. Lee Astorino, 34, a gardener in Hawthorne, Calif., began buying stock in 1972, and he even picked a few winners for a while. But the value of his holdings in American Airlines fell from $28 to $7 a share by 1974, and he lost thousands of dollars. After the latest rally began earlier this month, Astorino decided to take another plunge. He paid $4 each for 200 shares of Photo-Control Corp., a maker of specialty camera equipment. As the market gyrated wildly last week, Astorino was very...
Mondale's office has received only a few disapproving telephone calls over his appearance. However, it could come back to haunt him when his presidential campaign begins in earnest. But some political analysts think Mondale made a smart move. Says a staffer at the Democratic National Committee: "Mondale has been in the doldrums. But after a gutsy move like this, people in political circles may start talking about...
...guarantee of the Palestinians' safety was certainly a decision that came back to haunt Washington last week. The exact form in which the guarantee was extended is a matter of considerable dispute. P.L.O. Representative Jamal Sourani told TIME Correspondent Wilton Wynn that the P.L.O. had received the assurance "in writing from Habib." In an interview with the French newspaper Le Monde, P.L.O. Chairman Yasser Arafat asserted, "I have in hand a document" containing the guarantee; he said he had received it as a condition for agreeing to pull the P.L.O. fighters out of Beirut. In a speech in Jidda...
...those tempted to come and I live on the Côte d'Azur, I give a warning: avoid Nice, for it is the privileged haunt of the most powerful 'criminal milieu' in the south of France." So writes Graham Greene, the British novelist, who has lived at Antibes, only a few miles from Nice, for the past 17 years. But the French will not be able to thrill to Greene's charges in his new nonfiction book entitled J'Accuse: Portrait of a Delinquent in His Protected Milieu. The appellate court...