Word: casey
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Second period--Scoring: Casey (B) (Gubbins), 3:37; Peddie (B) (DiBasi), 9:33. Penalties: White (H) (elbow check), 0:25; White (H) (check in center zone), 2:39; Casey (B) (interference), 4:57; Murphy (B) (slashing), 6:42; Priestley (B) (interference), 12:32; Sennott (B) (hooking...
...both to change national habits and create folklore. It was one of the first to sponsor excursion tours to the South via its "True Winter Route"*. And the folk hero of all U.S. railroading rose from the wreck near Grenada, Miss. in 1900, where Illinois Central Engineer John Luther ("Casey") Jones died with one hand on the brake, the other on the throttle...
...Wheeler opened the scoring on a close screen shot at 4:05, but Hal Marshall tied it up for Harvard a minute later on a 15-footer into the corner on a Joe Kittredge pass-out. John Casey put the Bruins ahead at 6:20 after stick-handling past the Crimson defense, and Wheeler added another on assists by Don Sennott and Tony Male at 9:37. Defenseman George Zernet ended the scoring on a hard shot from the blue line at 15:34. Brown's aggressive first line of Sennott, Wheeler and Malo accounted for eight of the Bruins...
Walt Whitman would be a pretty good antidote for the world's present troubles, thought Irish Playwright Sean (Juno and the Paycock) O'Casey, who set his idea to a little rhyme for the New Statesman and Nation...
...first two years," says Banker Meyer, "I made every mistake in the book." Then he was persuaded to take on some top professional journalists. As editor he hired able, literate Felix Morley;* as managing editor he got flashy, temperamental Alexander F. ("Casey") Jones from the Minneapolis Journal. Morley, who came to the Post from the Brookings Institution, took editorial writers out of their ivory tower, sent them out to dig up their own facts, soon made the Post's editorial page the best-written and best-read in Washington. The Post supported Roosevelt in most of his foreign policies...