Word: haye
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...proverb has it, the more things change, the more they are the same. Even up here, my health is precarious: as I used to write you in clinical detail during my years of childhood, adolescence and maturity, I suffer from hay fever, chills, diseases of the urinary tract and bowels, insomnia and aches of the joints. Perhaps disease is what guards my moral sense. As I wrote in Remembrance of Things Past, "Illness is the most heeded of doctors: to goodness and wisdom we only make promises; we obey pain...
...Satisfy a Woman, Hay...
Both sides in the House made predictable hay of the resulting pack age. But in a formal statement from the White House, President Reagan declared that the resolution "is not an answer to arms control that I can responsibly support...
...cold. Most people think it has the flu. It certainly doesn't have the pneumonia that the commission suggested." According to the College Board, SAT scores seem to have stabilized, and students have taken an increasing number of academic courses in each of the past six years. LeRoy Hay, chairman of the Manchester (Conn.) High School English department and 1983 National Teacher of the Year, said, "The recommendations are responsive to what used to be. We have begun to stress excellence once again...
...retrospective" in the U.S. for 30 years. It is, necessarily, a modest affair compared with the immense Constable show at the Tate Gallery in 1976, which was the kind of exhibition that defines the image of an artist for a generation. Many favorites are not here, starting with The Hay Wain, the most reproduced landscape in English painting-a sort of vegetative Mona Lisa. But the show was curated by the world's leading Constable specialist, Graham Reynolds, formerly of London's Victoria and Albert Museum, and it serves as a delightful refresher course for those who know...