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Word: sam (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Roselli described how he and his longtime mentor, onetime Chicago Mafia Chief Momo Salvatore ("Sam") Giancana, had been recruited by the CIA in the early '60s to assassinate Fidel Castro. It made a kind of amoral sense for the agency to turn to the Mob: when the Cuban leader took power, he closed down the Mafia's big moneymaking operations in Havana; Roselli had been running the swank Sans Souci gambling casino there. Roselli told the Senators that he also saw the killing of Castro as a "patriotic" endeavor, something he could do for his country. Both poisoned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: Deep Six for Johnny | 8/23/1976 | See Source »

what our seemers be," says Duke Vincentio (Sam Waterston) as he sets out, disguised as a friar, to play God like some sadistic schoolboy among the seamy souls who inhabit his city. Vincentio wants to re-establish law-and-order, but he leaves the governing to Angelo, a celebrated Puritan played like a young Robespierre by John Cazale. Angelo believes in absolute justice but soon declines into lechery and official murder. Meanwhile the city fathers can't even clear the streets of prostitutes. A black pimp, brilliantly played in high camp by Howard Rollins Jr., asks, "Does your worship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: License in the Park | 8/23/1976 | See Source »

...concerns the folkways and seductions of the California beach life. It means to be funny and a little sad, but Director Daniel Petrie (Buster and Billie) and Writer Ron Koslow share a point of view that slides and shifts like the tide. Their hero is a lifeguard named Rick (Sam Elliott), a 32-year-old beach veteran who gets most of what he requires out of life by patrolling along the water's edge. When Rick thinks he may want a little more than fresh air, sunshine, the chance to meet a few new girls and to save...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Sink or Swim | 8/16/1976 | See Source »

...week long Ford had gained stature mostly by doing nothing. His reaction to the frantic Reagan maneuvering had been low-key. Perhaps he had learned the old wisdom of Texan Sam Rayburn's curt advice: "The three most important words in the English language are 'wait a minute.'" Since his hasty pardon of Nixon, Ford has typically moved slowly, listened widely to advice and pushed steadily on, waiting for his adversaries to slip. Reagan did so last week. Ford just puffed on his pipe. He asked the S.O.S. and Chowder and Marching Club (Republican hail fellows from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: REPUBLICANS: A GAMBLE GONE WRONG | 8/9/1976 | See Source »

Michael Kramer and Sam Robert's new book doesn't cover much new ground, tending to concentrate on events which are already public knowledge. The authors focus on the specific role of Rockefeller in those incidents through interviews with his aides and enemies and through a commendably exhaustive investigation into the public record. The result is a highly readable, entertaining acount of his political career...

Author: By Seth Kaplan, | Title: Rocky and His Friends | 7/30/1976 | See Source »

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