Word: waked
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...where her parents were wed 36 years ago. Meanwhile, NBC's early-rising Televendor Dave (Today) Garroway, 42, decided to end a long spell of grass widowerhood (he was divorced in 1946) with TV Production Coordinator Pamela Wilde, 28. Glowed Garroway: "Now I'll have someone to wake me at 4 a.m.!" In Washington onetime Price Administrator Paul A. Porter, 51, now a capital lawyer and being jettisoned by his wife (since 1930), confirmed rumors that he is entranced with thrice-wed (to All-America Footballer Robert Herwig, Bandleader Artie Shaw, Attorney Arnold Krakower) Novelist Kathleen Winsor...
Coach Bruce Munro last year eased the varsity lacrosse team through what was probably the worst season since he came to the Crimson with the immortal thought always in the back of his head that next year things should be different. The 1955 squad emerged from obscurity in the wake of one of Mnuro's best, and spent the whole year getting the experience it had missed on the bench the year before...
...Lynn or a Jewish organization meeting in Chelsea, Tom Lane will be there," a friend explained. "Three weeks ago he attended at least six affairs in Revere, Lynn and Chelsea-all on one Sunday. He just never lets up. He'll look in the paper, see that a wake is to be held or a group is meeting, and he'll say he'd better...
Within the year, the newlyweds invite Mira for a visit to their big-city home. In due time she meets Richard again. With India's sun-scorched earth and evergreen-crowned peaks for a backdrop, their illicit love affair is a many-splendored dream. They wake up to the man-made India riven by hate. In a tragedy of errors, Kit and Premala are murdered by nationalist extremists, and as the episode ramifies, Mira and Richard find that not even their love can break through the sociocultural barrier...
...client go into bankruptcy, steering him to a fee-splitting lawyer. In Seattle a truck driver who got behind in his payments to the prorater found that the agency had changed hats. It began working as a collection agency for his creditors, and garnisheed his wages. Clients who wake up, discover that they've signed a skillfully-drawn, loophole-tight contract. One Philadelphian taken for $500 appealed to the local Legal Aid Society only to find 70 complainants before him. Nothing could be done. Said he: "It cost me $500 to find out I could handle my debts better...