Most hurt the confidence sowed in him however, much unfair one and onto a charge embittering him his 158 million big public loans not achieved with big fortune between the heavy relations supplied an occasion.
32.
On her trip here in September, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright asked that Israel call a " time out " on housing demolitions and other acts that are embittering Palestinians and endangering peace talks.
33.
The challenge now, he said, is to move beyond the " bitter divide between left and right " and begin to address the " embittering divide between poverty and wealth ."
34.
But Parliament unceremoniously rejected both the measure and a substitute, embittering those who had hoped that Kuwait, still the only Persian Gulf country with an elected Parliament, would set a broader example of reform.
35.
Besides embittering some big shareholders by leaving them in the dark about the continuing investigations, experts on governance said the directors might have fallen short of recently toughened federal standards for board scrutiny of alleged corporate misconduct.
36.
The assembly said years of fighting has left a " climate of impunity . . . which denies justice to the thousands of victims, embittering the population to a point where the Chechen Republic could truly become ungovernable ."
37.
The assembly said years of fighting have left a " climate of impunity . . . which denies justice to the thousands of victims, embittering the population to a point where the Chechen Republic could truly become ungovernable ."
38.
Even more embittering for Catholics is the legacy of 1997, when soldiers erected barbed wire at Drumcree, but only as a ruse to catch most of the protesters asleep when Garvaghy Road was saturated with armor and riot police before dawn.
39.
Those sanctions contribute to the deaths of up to 7, 000 children a month and are embittering the Iraqi people, according to Denis Halliday, the U . N . humanitarian coordinator in Iraq for 13 months until he resigned in September.
40.
Both parties'leaders are in exile, embittering a political climate heated by a series of assassinations of politicians, as well as sectarian violence and deadly fighting between Pakistan's Army and suspected al-Qaida militants near the Afghan border.