Word: lied
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...never been so lucid." Yet rather than play Calugula as existential lecturer, Karlen in fact appears a bit mad, like a boy with a whopping identity crisis and an over-powering impulse for self-destruction. When he announces that "people die and they are not happy. Everything is a lie and I want people to live in truth. I will teach them," and spends the rest of the play degrading, insulting and murdering his comrades, Karlen gives the impression it is madness more than method which drives...
...throughout the world protested that it was a backward-looking move that might jeopardize years of patient progress toward lower tariffs. Wilson's rebuttal was contained in his next major policy pronouncement, a detailed White Paper emphasizing that the solution to Britain's economic ills does not lie in "oldfashioned, restrictionist ideas," as he puts it, but in stem-to-stern reform of backward industries and restrictive labor practices...
...Ikeda does not lie!", intoned in a rasp ing, gravelly voice, was his slogan, and it aptly described his administration...
Still a bigger payoff could lie ahead...
...roots of these improper criticisms lie in the CRIMSON's conception of the typical Harvard student. The CRIMSON would have us subscribe to the following image: the Harvard student is intellectually ambitious in many fields of enquiry. During his four years at Harvard, he should be exposed to as many "techniques" in as many different areas as possible. Content is relatively unimportant. When the student graduates he will immediately find time to fill in the content of all these academic fields. Furthermore, he will want to do so. Now the CRIMSON also makes the assumption that one academic year...