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Word: ring (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

King Everest slides down a metal slope on skis-on his hands. Madame Gena puts a ring full of camels through high-stepping Bactrian high jinks. Unus performs the impossible on one finger atop a light globe. Harold Alzana teeters through several near falls on his 40-ft. high wire. And the Zacchinis, their cannon now billed as "atomic," are launched in a flash of gun powder into a safety net and "recovered in time for the next countdown." Newest star is blonde Evelyn Currie, 20, who is appearing with Ringling Bros...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Circuses: Past Tents | 4/13/1962 | See Source »

...felt like a fighter wearing 16-ounce gloves . . . up against a bare-knuckle slugger who had gouged, kneed, and kicked"--so he writes of his feelings after the "kitchen debate." Of the 1952 campaign he reflects: "The idea of putting Stevenson in the ring with a man like Stalin simply petrified me." The quality the U.S. needs most of in the Cold War is "moral, mental, and physical stamina"; the men who make policy do not require imagination or intelligence so much as "facing up to hard realities." Well-researched, well-briefed, in a word, well-trained, Mr. Nixon battles...

Author: By Robert W. Gordon, | Title: Mister Nixon | 4/11/1962 | See Source »

...chance to lose his title on his back, not on his feet." Top Shape. Ringwise observers were more concerned over the fact that New York authorities allowed the fight to start in the first place. Dr. Alexander Schiff of the New York Athletic Commission insisted that "Paret entered the ring in top physical shape." But he had been knocked out twice in his three previous fights. A year ago, when he lost the welterweight title to Griffith in a 13-round knockout, it took his handlers several minutes to get him in condition to leave the ring. In a rematch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Magnified by TV | 4/6/1962 | See Source »

...result is probably an extremely bright aurora. No human has seen this spectacle because Jupiter always shows the earth an almost entirely sunlit face. If a spaceship from earth ever cruises behind the dark side of Jupiter (never less than 460 million miles away), the crew may see a ring drawn around its darkened magnetic pole in brilliant auroral light. That bright target will illuminate the safest landing spot, the hole in the doughnut, where the explorers will be able to set down (if Jupiter has any solid surface at all) without passing through the Van Allen belt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Jupiter's Hot Halo | 4/6/1962 | See Source »

...when he was 17. At one time he was a bus boy in Atlantic City; at another, he and his close friend, Painter Raphael Soyer, enrolled in a class to learn machine embroidery. When Gross got married, friends had to help out. "Someone bought me a ring; someone else provided the wedding supper, and a third bought the marriage license." All the while he studied art, but before 1935, the year he won a $3,000 commission from the Treasury Department, Gross sold only an occasional statue for $10 and a few watercolors for $1 apiece...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Good Humor in Bronze | 4/6/1962 | See Source »

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