Word: shook
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...Bush. Early in the presidency, Frum--who later received credit for the deathless, and perhaps senseless, phrase "axis of evil"--submits a speech. The President eviscerates it. Frum asks why. "The material he had hacked out," Frum writes, "seemed to me the headline story of the event. Bush shook his head at me. The Headline is: BUSH LEADS...
...project was hatched in 1998, after a North Korean ballistic missile flew over Japan and shook the nation's collective faith in the U.S. military umbrella that has shielded it for half a century. U.S. officials initially pressured Japan to buy American satellites, but Tokyo insisted on developing its own technology. Social Democratic Party lawmaker Masami Imagawa warns that government hawks "are quietly expanding military strength without enough public debate...
...October 1921, a crisis shook Harvard’s campus...
...Stone shook up the line combinations by returning Ingram to the second line, and alternating sophomore Kat Sweet and senior Tracy Catlin on the first line with Harvard captain Jennifer Botterill and freshman Julie...
...music, the White Stripes, the Vines (who wowed critics but didn't come close to selling a million records) et al. were not nearly so successful as real relics such as James Taylor, Santana, Springsteen and even Elvis Presley, whose remixed A Little Less Conversation shook its pelvis up the singles charts 25 years after the King's death. This phenomenon was as much a matter of technology as psychology: with the spread of CD burning and online music piracy among kids, middle-aged folks are essentially the only people who buy music anymore...