Word: hashing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Real Opponent. This was tough talk, but no tougher than Scranton's attack on the Johnson Administration, which he accused not of having "bad policies," but of having "no policies." The Democrats, he said, "have put together a short-order foreign policy, serving each day's hash from the leavings of yesterday's mistakes." If given the nomination, he pledged, he would "strip away the sham promises, the heavy-handed politics-as-usual, the worn bag of political legerdemain which the Johnson Administration has substituted for a sense of national purpose. For the past six months...
...Thursday Richmond's highly-touted Bill Hash belted a home run off Lee Sargent in the third inning, and gave the Spiders a 1-0 lead, which stood up until the sixth inning. A walk to Skip Falcone, a sacrifice by Miller, and a single by Stephenson tied the score. In the ninth Tobin beat out an infield hit, John Dockery sacrificed him to second, and Liebgott won the game with a single to left...
...undoubtedly a good thing for golf that Nicklaus is no great shakes as a putter. By the time he finished the round, Jack had three-putted two greens, muffed four easy putts of 5 ft. That pretty well settled his hash: the best he could manage was a score of 66 for a 72-hole total of 271 (13 under par) and a three-stroke victory. He even managed to look annoyed at himself as he pocketed a $7,500 check that boosted his bankroll to $8,700 and made him golf's No. 1 money-winner...
...Harvard doesn't score a pin or two against Rutgers tonight in the I.A.B., the odds are pretty good that the Scarlet Knights can beat them. Rutgers traditionally makes hash of its Ivy League opponents and they've already beneath Yale 24-9 and Princeton 24-10 so far this year...
...Chinese Prime Minister is an urbane liar of a play. In a triumph of style over substance, it serves its mental hash like Beluga caviar, pours its intellectual eyewash like Dom Pérignon. This sleight-of-hand artistry succeeds for two reasons. Playwright Enid Bagnold loves the English language with rare fidelity, and in the present semi-illiterate state of the U.S. stage, pure English makes an irresistible lover for an audience. Equally indispensable is an actress who can do no wrong from first entrance to final curtain. Margaret Leighton's eyes are wounds of inner pain...