Word: babcock
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...nine. Barry Babcock was the littlest boy in the Temple City, Calif.. Little League. But he had already put in one year patiently serving as his team's bat boy, and last week Barry got his chance to play. His father, Jack Babcock. watched proudly from the stands as Barry stepped into the batter...
...ball hit him on the chest. The youngster dropped his bat, staggered backward, collapsed in the arms of Umpire Al Millham. and died. Improbably, the mild impact had stopped Barry's heart. Pitcher Hanes collapsed in hysterics. But like so many Little League parents, grief-stricken Jack Babcock showed a stubborn concern for the game. "I hope this doesn't curtail Little League ball," said Babcock. "Barry wouldn't want that. He loved baseball more than anything in life...
...investment companies. Wall Street's E. F. Hutton & Co. reported that some built up cash and bond holdings, while an equal number took the opposite position, bought heavily in common stocks. There was big buying in American Telephone & Telegraph, International Business Machines, Arkansas Louisiana Gas, Tampa Electric, and Babcock & Wilcox. Selling was heavy in such drug stocks as Chas, Pfizer, Merck, and Parke, Davis, following the unfavorable publicity of the Kefauver hearings...
...TAYLOR Babcock Memorial Presbyterian Church Baltimore...
...GREAT part of modern life is lived by artificial light, and yet no major painter has devoted himself to this glittering and multi-hued area until now. This week Manhattan's Babcock Galleries put on show the work of Chicago's Richard Florsheim, the first artist to attempt an all-out embrace of the world of electrical, chemical and neon fires. With painters everywhere attempting to reestablish contact, however ephemeral, with nature, Florsheim points out that man-made lights are also part of nature. The nighttime view from an airplane or a train can take...