Word: hell
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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There isn't one single guy today at the White House who has an agriculture background. Take the presidential aide handling agriculture and the environment, John Whitaker. You know what he is? A geologist! What the hell does a geologist know about agriculture? Secretary Hardin is an economist. You can take all the economists in the world and lay them end to end, and they'll never come to a conclusion. My initial reaction to Dr. Butz? Oh hell, another professor! I was hoping for someone from the soil. But I'm reserving judgment until I find...
...here as it is in Havana," he shot back. "I don't even wear an undershirt." But Castro plainly failed to arouse much excitement. When he arrived, a crowd of some 750,000 Chileans lined the streets of Santiago, chanting "Fidel, Fidel, give those Yankees hell!" Bigger and more enthusiastic crowds had turned out for Charles de Gaulle in 1964 and Queen Elizabeth in 1968. In Antofagasta, where there are three universities, Castro drew only 400 to a student rally...
...passion, distills them in her diary; they stay or leave; fangs out, she hunts for more. What is particularly insidious about this pattern is that she uses the diary to bitch in. Where in the course of a relationship she is unable to tell her seducer to go to hell, she does so in the diary, so that we will know that it wasn't that Anais Nin was jilted...
...these problems is that there will have to be a speedup in the pace of economic recovery to bring about an anti-inflationary rise in productivity, rather than the other way round. Says Robert Nathan, a member of TIME'S Board of Economists: "We need a hell of a big push on the economy through increased Government spending. This would lead to greater demand, lower unemployment, higher plant utilization and productivity, and give us a better chance to fight inflation." That is the reverse of traditional economic dogma, which holds that a rapid business expansion creates the danger...
...saved or lost from the beginning, nor a theology entirely of faith, in which man is saved by faith alone. In essence, it sees man's life on earth as a daily gamble to be won or lost as each man may choose. However much the reality of hell may be dimmed among today's Catholics, they retain the conviction that it is still quite possible to lose one's soul -or save...