Word: shredding
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
They offer it as a series of melodramatic cliches, seen strictly in terms of black (noble, long-suffering, righteous) and white (sadistic, loutish, bigoted). Any shred of evidence damaging to Jackson - and there is a good deal - is conveniently omitted...
...although she has not been able to find the license, claims that she and her children have nothing to live on while the courts try to untangle Martin's estate. Says she bleakly: "My humility is gone. My pride is gone. I don't have a shred of dignity left. I've been reduced to having to beg for aid for dependent children and food stamps. I can go through anything, but those children have...
Malone must have forgotten his superiors' orders to shred each year what was probably the touchiest record of all. Thus, when he retired last year, he left behind in his safe a list of apparently illegal burglaries conducted by FBI agents in New York and other cities since 1971 in a desperate attempt to uncover information about Weatherman bombings and the fugitive bomb throwers. The list moved through FBI channels to the Justice Department and exploded last week like a bombshell...
...this. In his exhaustive study, A Prince of Our Disorder, Dr. John E. Mack has brought his psycho-historical skills to all that is known about Lawrence in an effort to set the record straight. Not content with simplistic Freudian digs at Lawrence, Mack has gathered every (but every) shred of evidence he could find--friends' recollections, letters, unpublished commentaries to Lawrence's books and, of course, Lawrence's massive opus which almost no one has read, "The Seven Pillars of Wisdom." The project took Mack, who also serves as the head of Harvard Medical School's psychiatric division...
...fudge that Howard savored. Meanwhile, the Mexican authorities seemed piqued that Hughes had got away without leaving anything valuable behind. Two days after his death, Mexican detectives raided his Jasmine suite in the Acapulco penthouse and seized three aides, who had stayed behind to pack furniture and shred files. At week's end the Mexicans charged Hughes Aide Clarence Waldron, 41, with forging Hughes' signature on a Mexican tourist card. The other two were released. Under intense questioning, the aides disclosed that Hughes had been bedridden for years and was too weak to write. He had been unconscious...