Word: hell
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Vellucci said, "three weeks ago the landlords were here complaining about the Rent Board. Tonight it was the tenants. I say they should get the hell...
...tired of sitting around my big expensive living room. My new Cadillac bored me. And I didn't know what the hell was right or wrong." Joseph Wambaugh, 36, the author of The New Centurions and The Blue Knight, is back on the beat as a detective with the Los Angeles police department after a six-month absence. Wambaugh's bestsellers about policemen have earned him more money than he wants to say, certainly more than his 13-year cop career. He still plans to write on his off-hours, but mainly, he says, "I want to stay...
Nixon and his aides argue that devaluation alone will not cure the U.S. payments problem. They contend that American products are blocked out of many foreign markets by discriminatory trade practices. Says Shultz: "Without changes on trade, you can change exchange rates until hell freezes over, and you won't get a thing...
...heroin. Pincus' passion is for revolution and cultivating flowers of evil from all the standard humanities-department seed catalogues. He is an organizer of the destruction of art in local museums and the burning of Harvard's Widener Library. He kills Mailer, further extending those justifications for hell raising that Mailer himself borrowed from Dostoevsky, Baudelaire...
More generally, an often overlooked disadvantage of having war criminals (or whatever) on the Faculty is that they spend their time in Washington advising the president while at Harvard the tutorial system is shot all to hell. Research in Widener and Littauer apparently present attractions capable of competing with the glory of working for the Federal government, but teaching in the College does not, at least not for the men who make names for themselves while they're away from Harvard...