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Not until the end of the story is it clear how much hoodwinking has gone on.
In the hoodwinking of the German people, this speech was Hitler's greatest masterpiece.
It was true, Teg thought then, that the process of arranging conflicts involved the hoodwinking of large masses.
"We have no intention of becoming an accessory to the hoodwinking of the American public," Mrs. Neuman said.
Vitige and Teodata quarrel, accusing one another of having gone too far in the hoodwinking of the King and having allowed the game to become serious.
Barry Levinson, who wrote and directed the film, loves these tactics for their very obsolescence and views good old-fashioned hoodwinking as an art about to be supplanted by the things for which Brantley stands.
No wonder that the good Artesians looked upon this hoodwinking of their Chief Commissary as the work of the devil, and their desire for revenge of the impudent spy was roused to positive fury.
Not without a cost of some five hundred louis, of much precious time, and difficult hoodwinking which does not blind, can this same Necessary of life be forwarded by the Flanders Carriers,--never to get to hand.
He praised the "hoodwinking and sleight of hand" involved in the plot, as well as Davies' "extremely likeable" performance, however felt that the Adam Klaus sub-plot "detracts from an otherwise well-burnished brainteaser of an episode."
"We have no intention of becoming an accessory to the hoodwinking of the American public," said the president of the League of Woman Voters, in explaining why the organization had withdrawn its sponsorship of the second Presidential debate.
Given the perspective of history, it's clear that Bennett and I owed our being in Heidelberg (and in fact our marriage) to the hoodwinking of the American public by the government which was later revealed in the Pentagon Papers.
In other words, we got married as a direct result of Bennett's being drafted - and he was drafted as a direct result of the Vietnam troop build-up of 1965-66, which was a direct result of the hoodwinking of the American public by the government.
The House and the Senate, in response to the outcry, approved last week the first stab at renewed regulation - a bill that would punish chief executives with jail for hoodwinking the public and would erect obstacles to future hoodwinking, particularly by accountants.
Or ignore the polls and look at those voting with their feet: the Army has missed its recruiting goals three months in a row, and the Marines every month since January, despite reports of scandalous ethical violations including the forging of high-school diplomas and the hoodwinking of the mentally ill by unscrupulous recruiters.
The invocation of Article 122 of the Lisbon Treaty is the loosest interpretation of legislation I have ever witnessed and, in my opinion, demonstrates a sort of political hoodwinking that proves that every paragraph of every article of every treaty is not even worth the paper it is printed on.