Word: daley
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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When lean, soft-spoken Arthur Daley made an offhand reference to MacCool in his New York Times sports column, readers scurried to the record books. They found Finn's name nowhere, and wrote indignantly to Daley, to say so. Last week, Daley wrote a column about the greatest fielder and base runner of his time...
...Daley once admired Con the Greyhound for giving the wind a head start and then beating it, and Shaun the Bullock, who could hold himself out at arm's length. But Finn was faster than one, stronger and defter than the other. Concluded Daley: "Bad cess to those who doubt...
...Michigan had over a dozen former Wisconsin lettermen on its squad and a dream backfield of potential all-Americas: Wisconsin's Elroy ("Crazy Legs") Hirsch and Jack Wink, Minnesota's star fullback Bill Daley, Michigan's own Paul White...
Following Corkum in the five event meet, which included timing, non-competitive events, the 100 yard dash, an obstacle course, rope climb, and ladder descent, and one competitive event--the 3.7 mile run, were Dick Bryan, Fred Peirce, and Ed Squibb, each with 23 points. Third was B. L. Daley with 32, and fourth Bob Hart, with...
Times readers found out about Kieran's departure only indirectly-when Sports Writer Arthur Daley began authoring Kieran's "Sports of the Times" column. Even then readers may have failed to notice the difference, because Daley's first effort was extremely Kieranesque. In a discussion of the Oregon State and New York City College basketball teams, both called "Beavers," Columnist Daley referred to an Oregon beaver as Castor Ore-goniensis and to a City College beaver as Castor Nova Eboracensis...