Word: paid
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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There was no time for inflated dachshunds on John Kennedy's campaign. "It was a breakneck, wild ride through the nights," recalls Hugh Sidey, who reported on that campaign, and every one since, for TIME. "Kennedy paid attention to us and knew what we were writing. Even when he chewed us out, we loved...
...Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa raided in 1916, John Alcorn, 69, gestures in the direction of the border. "Had 16 teeth out and a new set of dentures made over in Palomas last week," he says, massaging his gums. "Would have cost me $2,000 in the U.S. I paid $600 over there, and the dentist did a damn good job." Health care is a relatively new economic trade-off, but the principles underpinning it are as old as the border itself. At Ernest Hurt's ranch just east of the Continental Divide and an easy horse ride to the Antelope...
...were the ones she had in mind when, in another famous essay, she declared herself "against interpretation." In her view, interpretation had become a means to reduce unruly art and literature to its manageable "content," a way of rendering art's raw power more digestible. She wanted more attention paid to art's sensual capabilities, to the way it works upon consciousness through the imprint of its form and surfaces. It was all summed up in her famous phrase: "Interpretation is the revenge of the intellect upon...
WASHINGTON. Defeated in his re-election bid two years ago, Republican Slade Gorton believed his political career was over. Reincarnation took place when Republican Dan Evans decided to retire. Ousted because he paid little attention to constituents and traded his vote on a controversial judicial nomination, Gorton this year has been conducting "listening tours" of the state. His chances benefited from an expensive primary battle won by Democratic Representative Mike Lowry, who was promptly hospitalized with a bleeding ulcer...
...paid for all the finery, the First Lady would, of course, have no need to report her purchases. Elaine Crispen, Mrs. Reagan's press secretary, said last week that the First Lady told her she has bought all the clothes she has worn since early 1982. Mrs. Reagan also told Crispen that since then she has not borrowed or been given any dresses...