Word: ben
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Snead could also recall an unhappy time. Just last year, when he was leading at the fourth and final round, he shot a disastrous eight (on No. 11), and folded, with an 80, thoroughly out of the running. On that occasion, cool Ben Hogan, who could remember losing the 1946 Masters when he three-putted the final green, came from behind to win with a four-under-par 68. Last week, after the second round, it seemed the same story all over again, with two old masters out in front of the younger aspirants. It was front-running Snead...
Elsewhere, the team seems to present relatively few problems. One of the brightest recent developments has been the long-range clouting of Ben Akillian, last year's clean-up hitter and left fielder. Captain Charley Wash also has been hitting a long ball and looking "very, very good" as a pitcher, according to McInnis...
...true that The Reporter has but scratched the topic's scaly surface, it has performed a service to the public merely by establishing the Lobby's existence. Once the Lobby has been proved a fact, there is less danger of its subverting American Far Eastern policy, as it has ben trying to do--with some success--for the last two or three years...
...further, blaming Tunisia's troubles on the nationalists, "men whose secret intentions were surely evil." Then he turned over Tunisia's Foreign Ministry to Resident De Hautecloque, agreed to withdraw Tunisian complaints from the U.N., and appointed a fat and wealthy pro-French Prime Minister, Salah Eddine Ben Mohammed Baccouche, 69, who proudly wears the cross of a Grand Officer of the Legion of Honor. It was a surprising victory for De Hautecloque. In Tunis, which is normally noisy at night, a rigid curfew kept things quiet except for the barking of dogs and the rumble of snub...
...Stirring Peoples. The leaders of Istiglal, the independence movement, are on the whole moderate men who prefer pressure to violence. Yet the ferment of Moslem nationalism is reaching west toward Morocco. Last autumn there were election riots. Last week the Sultan, Sidi Mohammed Ben Youssef, who was once mistakenly thought to be a safe man for France, dispatched a letter to President Vincent Auriol demanding more local rule...