Word: bulling
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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These include Johnny Fields, formerly with Wild Bill Davison, on the bull fiddle; trumpet player Rudy Braff, once with Bobby Hackett's band; and Al Navarro at clarinet. George Wein will be at the plane and Don Scott on drums. Contrasted against Higgenbotham's individual style will be that of Ralph Ferrigno, Boston trembonist now with Max Kaminsky...
...extensive scope of the questionnaire which asks about advisers, tutorial, "bull sessions" with the faculty, and joint research projects represents the expansion of the Committee from a group originally interested only in tutorial, chairman David C. Poskanzer '50 told the Council last night...
Died. Admiral Joseph Mason ("Bull") Reeves, U.S.N. (ret.), 75, early advocate of naval air power, first Commander in Chief of the U.S. fleet (1934-36) to wear wings (observer) and last to sport a beard (Vandyke); of a heart ailment; in Bethesda, Md. Reeves, a stanchion-stiff disciplinarian, earned his first commendation in the engine room of the Oregon on her round-the-Horn dash from San Francisco harbor to the Caribbean in '98, served with the Atlantic fleet in World War I, came out of retirement in World War II to serve as the Navy's Lend...
...impressiveness of the rise, the market still had far to go before it convinced traders that a permanent turn had come. It had to break out of the narrow "trading range" between 160 and 188 on the Dow-Jones industrial index in which it had moved since the bull market ended in 1946. Not in 45 years had the market backed & filled in so narrow a range (percentagewise) for so long...
Everything is grist for his mill: comic strips, eating habits, dates, company picnics, pet names, bull sessions, charity drives, the State Department, foreigners, middle-aged women, vitamins, public opinion polls, antiSemitism, poker games, investment capital, psychoanalysis, the Senate and the Statue of Liberty. Much of the book is funny, some of it is brilliant; all of it would be improved if the author had left out the high-toned language and one-way-glass point of view of anthropology...