Word: chips
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...instances, the results ranged from social anarchy to the destruction of the very self so clamorously being sought. To anyone who sup ports such an analysis, the play has a rueful undertone. Like some of the high flying securities of its day, Holiday, once hailed as a dramatic blue chip, seems to have plummeted to the lowly "cats and dogs" category...
...banner year for Wall Street's outlaw satellite, the market in hot stocks, bonds and other securities. The total take is enormous. W. Henry DuPont, chairman of a firm that keeps track of missing securities, estimates that $50 billion in illegitimate paper is afloat, most of it blue-chip stocks and some of it federal, state, municipal and corporate bonds. Insurance companies are the ultimate victims. They must make good to any insured bank or brokerage house that takes a loss by theft or by buying hot securities in good faith. Most banks and brokerages are covered. The individual...
...half started that they should continue their attack. "This is the end," he said, and Harvard responded by opening the half with an offensive flurry. LeRoy Thompson challenged Maronpot with a hard shot that went wide, and fullbacks Lawson Wulsin and Ralph Booth kept the pressure on with high-chip shots to the forwards...
McInally's 13 receptions broke the Harvard mark of 11 set by Carter Lord in 1967, and tied the Ivy single-game standard set by Brown's own Chip Regine in 1972. His 13 catches boosted his Harvard single-season reception mark to 53, and moved him within 9 of Lord's career mark of 62. McInally also broke another Lord standard--for single-season touchdown receptions. With 2 scoring grabs against Brown, McInally moved one head of Lord's single-season mark...
After 17 minutes Bob Auritt, who played for ten minutes in the second half, kicked a corner kick and in the ensuing scramble the booters pressured the Tiger goal. Princeton fullback Steve Tobolski cleared the ball to midfield, where forward Chip Caine dribbled it downfield pursued by Fearnett and Wulsin. Fearnett caught up with him and blocked his shot. The ball was rolling smoothly toward the goal when all of a sudden Princeton forward Jim Hansen, who was trailing, appeared on the scene to chip the ball with the outside of his foot...