Word: kept
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...from Bizet's famous opera and gave it a little jazz flavor before really mixing it with pan rhythms and letting the tenor players tear it up. Tenor player Dane Gulston made his presence known from the start of the show and, at center stage for the remainder, he kept the intensity flowing and the tone of the show light as he alternatingly teased and supported the other band members. At one point, he challenged Natasha Joseph, double second player and the lone woman in the group, to a little duel. While she lacked Gulston's dynamic stage presence...
...through "Tell Me, Momma," Dylan introduced his next song "I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)" from Another Side of Bob Dylan, proclaiming "it used to be like that, and now it goes like this." Didn't the audience get it? Obviously not. They kept falling for Dylan's antics again and again in hopes that his former self might resurface. But this night, there was no chance...
...people who read Fox's interview in People Magazine revealing his long-kept secret or saw him talking with Barbara Walters on last Friday's "20/20" can fail to have been impressed by his faith and optimism in battling the degenerative neurological disorder. Amidst such melodramatic headlines as "The Fight of His Life," Fox has kept a calm, almost beatific demeanor in addressing concerns about his health and future. This is no small feat when you consider the disease he is facing...
Brown (1-5-2, 1-5-2) is eighth in the league due to fortuitous scheduling and strong goaltending. The Bears have accumulated three of their four points against the hapless Crimson. Junior goaltender Scott Stirling has kept Brown in most games. Six of his starts have been decided by one goal or less...
...sheer reclusiveness, Hughes (Howard, not Brian G.) had a worthy rival in candymaker Forrest Mars Sr. Virtually every detail of Mars' life--including his birthday--is kept a closely guarded corporate secret within Mars Inc., a secretive company. He has reportedly given but one interview in his entire career and that to a candy-industry trade paper in 1966. Yet even Mars' and Hughes' penchant for anonymity pales before that of Basil Zaharoff (1849-1936), a munitions king aptly called the "Mystery Man of Europe." Zaharoff systematically stole or destroyed all records of his youth and early manhood, making snooping...