Word: shaked
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...West Was Won. This Cinerama epic goes wild and woolly with a wagonload of stars and a thousand thundering buffaloes that threaten to shake the balcony loose from its moorings...
Tough & Mean. "Gary Player says he's going to win," said Nicklaus on the eve of the Masters. "Arnie Palmer says he's going to win. I say I am." A scrambling opening-round 74, two over par, failed to shake his confidence. "How are you feeling?" asked a friend. "Big and strong?'' "Yeah." growled Nicklaus. "Big and strong-and tough and mean." On the second day, Jack Nicklaus gave the big (6,980-yd.), tough Augusta National Course one of the worst floggings in its history...
...next time he is in London, he will be presented to the Queen. He gets 200 letters a week from all over the world, many addressed simply "Pelé" - with no country. Back home in Brazil, he is Edson Arantes do Nascimento. and ambitious politicians are forever trying to shake his hand in front of photographers. He is the biggest star of the world's big gest spectator sport - soccer - and he is only...
...Circle revived what they call "a modern classic", "The Shakers", choreographed in 1931 by the late Doris Humphrey. It could have been left unresuscitated; few would have missed it. Miss Humphrey evidently felt that the Shakers were frightfully boring people, who, as the program tells us, "believed they could shake themselves free of sin and did not believe in marriage." Her piece begins with a prayer meeting that is totally mechanical and unsubtle. Although some prayer meetings may fit this description they do not make good material for dance programs. What naturally results is incredibly obvious choreography laid...
...quite clear last week that the latest shake of the kaleidoscope resulted in new patterns and alignments overwhelmingly favorable to Gamal Abdel Nasser. The Syrian revolution was the third in six months by rebels pledged to make common cause with Egypt. Flights of new leaders poured into Cairo for tear-stained embraces with Nasser and nightlong conferences on the future course of that misty concept called Arab unity. Nasser stands at the pinnacle of prestige, if not of power, and the shadow he casts has never been longer. Today, it falls over the entire Arab world from the Persian Gulf...