Word: hughe
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...press run for the first issue is 1,000,000, but Guccione is counting on riding the same wave that carried Penthouse to 4.5 million circulation in four years and has pushed Hugh Hefner's Out over 1.7 million during its first year. Viva's first issue runs 156 pages, with 50 ad pages. Will Viva sell at $1 a copy? Guccione promises that "she" will "fight, scream, and shed a few tears to make her voice heard." She might also attempt to find some wit and focus and sex appeal...
Retired Army Gen. Hugh B. Hester wrote this summer that ROTC graduates, in fact, make relatively poor army material. Because the U.S.'s real defense needs require great technical expertise. Hester said, the army would do better to rely on trained civilians in emergencies...
Retired Army Gen. Hugh B. Hester wrote this summer that ROTC graduates, in fact, make relatively poor army material. Because the U.S.'s real defense needs require great technical expertise, Hester said, the army would do better to rely on trained civilians in emergencies...
...interview with TlME's Hugh Sidey, Kissinger spoke carefully, fie must still face the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and be confirmed. He did not want to talk plans and programs, techniques and hopes, grand ideas for his New World. He was obviously rather awed by his new nomination and yet not the least bit afraid of it. A German-born Jew, unpropertied, unelegant and unimposing, Henry Kissinger seemed ready to move toward the pantheon of national greats...
...hazards of the parson's profession? It may be, at least among the Presbyterian ministers in the straitlaced Church of Scotland. A recent study of a representative sampling of the church's clergy men claims that fully 68% suffer from "mental, psychoneurotic and personality disorders." Dr. Hugh A. Eadie, a young Presbyterian minister from Australia, made the findings while at the University of Edinburgh, as part of a larger examination of the health of Scottish clergy. The first section of his inquiry determined that ministers enjoyed better health than most other Scottish occupational groups-both fewer illnesses...