Word: truths
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...There he goes again. Weeks ago, Speaker Gingrich unveiled a kinder, gentler Newt -- complete with new and improved poll numbers. But in the past few days, Gingrich has done a 180 by launching his most vicious verbal volley yet. Accusing Clinton of "the most systematic effort to avoid the truth we have ever seen in American history," the Speaker lambasted White House attacks on Ken Starr -- advising the "unpatriotic" administration to "shut up." More bemused than angry, Clinton's staff is handling Gingrich like the naughty kid at the back of the class. "As soon as he comes back...
...even-handed advice. But in order for it to be useful, students have to be both thorough and brutally honest in their feedback. Just because our grades are inflated does not mean that our professors' should be. When you receive that CUE Guide form this week, tell the truth. Future generations of Harvard students will be forever grateful...
...reminds them of another bigfoot Democrat who seemed to regard himself as better than the process--Mario Cuomo, the longtime New York Governor, now a lawyer in private practice. Plenty has changed since Cuomo's big moment: Paul Tsongas and Ross Perot have come and gone, and the political truth teller has become just another available package--one that journalists may like more than voters do. The public that twice elected Bill Clinton seems to favor politicians who revel in the game, and Bradley never has. He guards his privacy and prefers to float above the fray--which could make...
...combined bank will have millions of them) worried about what this would mean for their accounts. And in Charlotte? McColl wasn't talking, having unloaded the big news in New York City early in the week. But from his 50th-floor office, he was surely reflecting on the inescapable truth and beauty of the First Law of Godzilla: Size does matter...
This unending "search for truth" has been conducted under the assumption that the exposure of private lives is always a purely destructive, if entertaining, exercise. But a small, recent incident proved otherwise. It happened around the time of the "Was he aroused?" TV interview of Kathleen Willey, and was so fleeting (and tasteful) one could easily have missed...