Word: crowningly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...their Shah to act like a king and treat them as subjects. When he appears in a village, they fall to earth to kiss his feet, a custom that causes him much embarrassment. In his private life, the Shah can unbend. He and Empress Farah-with their three children, Crown Prince Reza, 6, Princess Farahnaz, 4, and Prince Ali Reza, 17 months-live in Teheran's Saadabad Palace in the summer, move to the better-heated Niavaran Palace when the cold weather comes. The Saadabad has been equipped with a regulation bowling alley, and the Shah uses...
...count of none. Neither fighter did any real damage to the other-legally, at least-and so few punches connected that the referee called the fight a draw. The two judges voted for Emile-9 rounds to 5, with 1 even. By a split decision, Griffith got his crown back. The promoters instantly started beating the drums for another rematch...
...that was it for the Boston offense. King Carl Yastrzemski, the subject of nearly every sports columnist in the country this morning after his fantastic Triple Crown season, took the horsecollar in four tries...
...rocked back on its heels, the ball spinning up as if shot from his groin. So Harmon did have it in him. The ball went right over Yastrzemski, and Carl could do nothing to stop a home run that stood between him and an undisputed lead for the Triple Crown. Kaat vs. Santiago. Yastzemski vs. Killebrew. Minnesota vs. Boston. The duals lined up perfectly, and the mind boggled at coincidence. It was a bad sign, that home run, because it was a parting gesture of defiance. A retreating enemy had signaled that it was not beaten...
Dartmouth and Princeton gave notice that they intend to fight Harvard for the Ivy Crown all three shared last year with wins over tough opponents. The Indians looked strong everywhere they were supposed to be weak, as they walloped the University of Massachusetts...