Word: hutchinsons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...last time the New York Yankees played the Cincinnati Reds, they won 1-0. That was in April, in an exhibition game. and Yankee Manager Ralph Houk still remembers the occasion. "I had a little chat with Fred Hutchinson at home plate. We were both going badly at the time, and we wondered how either of us would ever win anything." This week Managers Houk and Hutchinson meet again at home plate, to conclude the managerial success story of the year. The Yankees are the American League champions, the Reds are the National League champions. and each team has only...
...frustration sent Cincinnati citizens into a nightlong riot. By morning, 27 had been arrested on charges ranging from receiving stolen property (a telephone ripped off a cafe wall) to disorderly conduct. But the man who had engineered the excuse for all the excitement had no time to relax. Fred Hutchinson remained the glowering dugout pacer who kept the Reds going all summer long...
...Fred Hutchinson of the Reds plans to start Robinson in left, Pinson in center, and Lynch, Post or Gus Bell in right, unless the game is at Crosley Field, in which case Hutch will put Robinson in right, Pinson in center, and Lynch, Post of Bell in left. Isn't baseball fascinating...
...When directors of troubled Chrysler Corp. tapped Lynn Townsend, 42, as president (TIME, Aug. 4), they gave him only one-third of the corporate power. Last week the other two-thirds was given to Executive Committee Chairman George Hutchinson Love, 61, who, as chairman of Pittsburgh's Consolidation Coal Co., is also the nation's biggest coalman. Chrysler's directors turned to Love because he is a proven comeback champion (his Consolidation is highly profitable despite the slump in coal). New Chairman Love will make policy and wield virtually the same powers as did former Chairman Lester...
...Haven in bankruptcy and Alpert back at lawyering, the ICC did a roundhouse turn. After a year-long study of the New Haven and its pyramiding deficits, the commission decided that subsidies might indeed be the answer. Testifying before a Senate Commerce subcommittee last week, ICC Chairman Everett Hutchinson, with the support of nine of the commission's eleven mem bers, presented a plan which, he argued, would save commuter railroads from "a plunge into disaster." Under the ICC proposal the Government would give the railroads with the heaviest commuter traffic the equivalent of their direct investment in passenger...