Word: fooled
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...clearly designed to preserve dictatorial powers for himself. If he insists on that course, warns Malik Ghulam Jilani, a political leader who fled to London for fear of his life, it will lead to the "demolition of Pakistan, brick by brick and stone by stone. Bhutto has tried to fool the people," he adds, "but now the people have seen his iron fist under the velvet glove...
Tonight's 7:05 p.m. contest will be a tough test for Bob Harrison's team. The Quakers are once again in first place and, after an upset loss to Brown earlier this week, are not in any mood to fool around...
SUNDAY: Columbo. Laurence Harvey as the world chess champion has a fool-proof gambit for retaining his title against his challenger: bump him off. Detective Joe Columbo (Peter Falk) oversees "The Most Dangerous Match." CH. 4. 8:30 p.m. Color...
What situation could be more conducive to the appearance-reality theme? Not only do we have a play within a play, which consists of everybody dressing up to fool Henry while he acts a part to fool them; we also get filled to the gills with more mirror imagery than can decently fit into a single play. The throne room is decorated with two life-sized portraits which are supposed to represent mirror images of Henry IV and Matilde of Tuscany, the woman he loves, and their presence stimulates a predictable discussion about the reality of reflections. Much is made...
Died. Jack MacGowran, 54, Irish actor who, while moving from meager bit parts in Dublin's Abbey Theater to meaty roles in television, stage and film (as the fool in King Lear, the mad soldier in How I Won the War), earned his best notices interpreting the work of his playwright friends Sean O'Casey and Samuel Beckett; of heart disease; in Manhattan, where he was playing in O'Casey's The Plough and the Stars (TIME...