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

...faced 19-year-old named Bobby Orr, who in only his second big-league season is already regarded as one of pro hockey's most talented defensemen and a budding superstar. "Bobby," says Coach Sinden, "does it all. He's the only player I've ever seen who can operate at top speed-wide-open, breakneck speed-and still execute all the fundamentals of the game." When Orr first arrived in Boston, he respectfully addressed other players as "mister" and "sir." This year he has shown little respect for his elders-stealing the puck away from Detroit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Big Bad Bruins | 1/5/1968 | See Source »

...fractured collarbone. Both regular Boston goalies, Eddie Johnston and Gerry Cheevers, are laid up with injuries, and the Bruins had to make do last week with Andre Gill, a 5-ft. 7-in. 155-pounder who was hurriedly called up from the minors. Like everybody else who has seen them play this year, Gill was mightily impressed with his new teammates. "They really want to win," he said. "They all give 110 percent." That being the case, Rookie Gill himself could do no less. Last week against Chicago, he blocked 20 shots and held Bobby Hull scoreless as the Bruins...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Big Bad Bruins | 1/5/1968 | See Source »

Papp's vision of the play is a daring one; he has communicated some, but not all of it, to his cast. Martin Sheen, recently seen as one of the punks in The Incident (TIME, Nov. 10), brings to the title role an imaginative boisterousness not unlike his superior work in that film; Ralph Waite is a dashingly demagogic Claudius. Anita Dangler is a fluttery flibbertigibbet of a Gertrude, while April Shawhan is a sexy, miniskirted Ophelia. Gait MacDermot's pounding rock background seems at least as appropriate to this version of the play as the gentle pleasing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Hamlet | 1/5/1968 | See Source »

...help preside, in Churchill's phrase, "over the liquidation of the British Empire." Often photographed in hairy tweed knickerbockers while shooting in the Scotch Highlands, Macmillan projected an image of woebegone Toryism anachronistic in the postwar scene of swinging Britain. That this image was misleading could be seen from the first volume of his memoirs (TIME, Sept. 30, 1966) in which he emerged as a humorous and generous-minded man, sharply aware of the currents of history, and a man, moreover, of liberal sympathies and considerable intelligence. Also, Publisher-Politician Macmillan could write better than any contemporary politician except...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Churchill's Gillie | 1/5/1968 | See Source »

Baneful Influence. If Macmillan won many battles of a military-diplomatic kind, it is sadly clear that he believes he lost the same military-diplomatic war. The Anglo-American conflict was over the grand question of what shape Europe would assume after the ultimate victory. Macmillan had seen the Poles left to defeat and noted Chamberlain's indifferent impotence with contempt and pity. Then, in mid-1944, he saw decisions made that reflected Franklin Roosevelt's obsessive desire to please Stalin and his "almost pathological suspicions" of British foreign policy, "especially in the Balkans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Churchill's Gillie | 1/5/1968 | See Source »

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