Word: hydes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Receiving the prizes were Adelbert Ames, 3rd '43, of Hanover, New Hampshire, George M. Burditt, Jr. '44, of La Grange, Illinois, Hugh M. Hyde '44, of New York City, and John Richardson, Jr. '43, of Milton...
...Gaulle has behind him the support of most of the still-free French empire (except North and West Africa); and of the audible political factions inside France. He has strong support in Britain, where he has worked closely with British officials. A Hyde Park comic drew laughs last week by purposefully mixing up Free, Fighting and Flirtatious French; but to the British people and Frenchmen imprisoned in their homeland De Gaulle is respected as a gallant fighter who carried high the French tricolor when other Frenchmen faltered, compromised...
...puerlie, high school basketball most of the way. The Harvard shooters, to a man, were woefully off; for Yale, only Gibbos and MacGauhey looked as HARVARD G F P Bixler, lf 3 2 8 Shields, lf 2 0 4 Hennessey, rf 0 0 0 Keene, rf 1 0 2 Hyde, c 5 3 13 Torgan, lg 3 1 17 Dillion, rg 3 3 9 -- -- -- Total...
Harvard rallied after eighteen minutes had passed, and decided finally to press Yale in the backcourt. These tactics paid off, the Blue not having learned how to bring the ball up against such an apparently new device, and Frank Bixler dunked two fouls. Hugh Hyde slipped in for a basket. Mike Keene converted a layup--all within fifty seconds. But the Crimson five was still three points behind, and Jack Torgan's long-range effort as the final gun sounded still left Harvard a point behind...
...President's head was bowed as Navy Chaplain Frank R. Wilson, onetime rector of Franklin Roosevelt's own St. James Episcopal Church at Hyde Park, intoned the Collect for Peace: "Defend us, Thy humble servants, in all assaults of our enemies, that we, surely trusting in Thy defense, may not fear the power of any adversaries...