Word: attackers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...U.S.S.R. hardened its line on summit talks, too. One day last week the Kremlin's Khrushchev sent a bitter letter to President Eisenhower rejecting the U.S.'s latest offer to begin joint technical studies on disarmament, adding a new attack on nuclear tests "causing an ever-present and ever-mounting danger to the health and life of the people . . . from radiation hazards." President Eisenhower prodded right back that K. really ought to begin technical studies: "I am unhappy that valuable time is now being wasted...
Britain's Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, committed to summit talks if diplomats can agree on an agenda, felt strong enough in terms of British public opinion to launch an attack against the Labor Party's line on nuclear tests. "What prevents war," he said, "is the balance of power. Peace has been preserved thus far not because the West has been disarmed but because the present balance is roughly equal. I would not like to be responsible for the outcome if we were to abandon the balance." Said the New York Times: "The Soviet strategy emphasizes again Moscow...
Nick Lamont had a field day as he easily spun around the Bruin defense time after time to tally six goals and an assist. Jerry Pyle, who helped out on midfield Wednesday, registered two goals and four assists for an attack which besieged the Brown goalie with 42 shots...
...varsity attack broke loose in the second quarter, as Dave Birch, Lamont, Pyle, Dub Mallonee and Lamont again poured five goals past the hapless Bruin net-minder...
...attack played together beautifully and the midfields, with four men missing from the first three lines, worked well in front of the cage. At one point, the visitors' defensemen were so well covered while trying to clear the ball that Dub Mallonee was able to steal the ball from the goalie, race in, and hit an empty cage for one of his three goals...