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...McVey, Dave Vietz, and Fischer played one of their best games of the season at second line as Fischer was particularly effective, both with his two goals and his constant backchecking. The third line of Bud Higgenbottom, Dick Reilly, and Dave Holmes was not as impressive as it has been, with the exception of Higgenbottom, who was robbed by Frankenburg several times in the second period...

Author: By James W. B. benkard, | Title: Varsity Sextet Swamps Green; Cleary Scores 3 in 8-3 Victory | 2/18/1957 | See Source »

...essence, tonight's game will pit three almost equally strong lines against two very good defenses. Bud Higgen bottom's recovery from a cracked ankle in time for the B.C. game has enabled Weiland to put him at center in the third line. Besides vastly improving this line, it also gives Weiland the opportunity of having a comparatively fresh forward wall on the ice at all times...

Author: By James W.B. Benkard, | Title: Sextet Meets Dartmouth Tonight, Needs Win for N.C.A.A. Position | 2/16/1957 | See Source »

Muggs was recovering from a virus infection at his rambling ten-room house in Ramsey, N.J., and his lawyer, Jack Katz, kept mum. But Bud Mennella of the J. Fred Muggs Enterprises confirmed that the chimp's little eyes were fastened on an active future. "The NBC contract is re warding," he said, "but also constricting." Muggs has had so many offers, he added, that he hardly knows where to start raking in the big money. At NBC, where he started at $250 a week, Muggs now makes only $1,275 a week, pads it out with "sizable" income...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Goodbye, Mr.Chimp | 2/4/1957 | See Source »

...sure they're as honest as they can be," said one unemployed comic last week. "But it's like the story of the gambler who played the roulette wheel in this little town and kept losing all night, until a fellow came up and said: 'Look, bud, that wheel is fixed.' 'I know,' said the gambler, 'but it's the only wheel in town...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: The Only Wheel in Town | 1/14/1957 | See Source »

Gaitskell is equally adept at using this "light touch" in both banter with miners in a midland pub and in debate on the floor of Commons, where his parliamentary wit has been sharpened through long tenure in the front benches. In his first bud-get message as Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1951, for example, he presented complex economic data underlying a major Socialist policy change with such vigor and clarity that the House discarded its normal reserve for such matters and rose to applaud as a unit. As a high minister in the Socialist government and as questionner...

Author: By Steven R. Rivkin, | Title: Politics and the Don | 1/10/1957 | See Source »

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