Word: bimbo
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...defendants had been well softened beforehand and declared their "deep repentance" for their "crimes." But Father Oden Lenard astonished the court by pleading innocent. In Hungary, judges are not used to this defiance. Judge Istvan Bimbo turned to the other defendants and asked if they thought Father Lenard was guilty. All ten said yes. Then Judge Bimbo turned back to Father Lenard...
...this point, Judge Bimbo abruptly recessed the trial. He later handed down a 7½-year jail sentence for Father Lenard and terms ranging from 2½ to seven years for the other ten defendants. By Hungarian standards, that sounded moderate enough. The question was whether Lenard would ever see the end of his sentence or would, like many other zealous Hungarian Catholics before him, mysteriously die in jail...
...more conventional surroundings. Chasen's rates its four stars more for its pressagentry than its food. On the other hand, the guide has also dug up many outstanding out-of-the-way spots, including Casa la Golondrina in Los Angeles, Spenger's Fish Grotto in Berkeley, and Bimbo's 365 Theatre Restaurant in San Francisco, starred twice by a taster whose appreciation for his crab bella vista was perhaps enhanced by the platoon of undraped chorines onstage. (The guide discreetly lists this as "elaborate entertainment...
...Columbia's Law, RCA's Chet Atkins, Decca's Owen Bradley, but the first citizen these days is Jim Reeves, 35, an ex-baseball player (Houston Buffalos). Singer Reeves has written about 100 songs and recorded more than 200, a surprising number of which, including Mexican Joe, Bimbo and He'll Have to Go, have been hits. The trick in writing songs, says Reeves, is to "try to use original rhymes and words that have not been beaten to death in other songs." Sample from Reeves's favorite creation, Am I Losing...
...this royal advent that sets the author's characters in violent and generally entertaining motion. (The characters are named Bimbo and Bunny and Cuckoo and Buddha, as they always are in British light fiction. No one knows why, just as no one knows why characters in U.S. ladies' fiction are all named Brett and Brick and Brack and Blade.) The tizzies in which the islanders become involved may be trivial-can anyone really fret about the problems of a cuckolded duke if he is called Droopy?-but they are enjoyed by all hands, including the author...