Word: kerrs
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...fifth through tenth singles will be B.U.'s Sheldon Caldwell and Tom Kerr, Middlebury's Pete Bostwick, Yale's Ed Meyer, Brown's George Kirkpatrick, and Amherst's Dave Hicks. Both of last year's finalists, Williams' Bill Cullen, the winner, and Brown's Doc Houk, have graduated from the collegiate ranks...
...name would hurt the Republicans with independent voters. Democratic National Chairman Paul Butler warned that President Eisenhower must stand responsible for "the type of campaign" that Nixon conducts. The fairdealing New York Post editorialized: "One might almost say this is a national emergency." And Oklahoma's Senator Robert Kerr, the nation's windiest master of the last word, proclaimed: "Unless the President's got a stronger back and a stouter heart than I think he has, that load, i.e., Nixon, will get awful heavy before November...
...Committee carpet within 48 hours, Louisiana's Allen Ellender nonetheless took direct aim at Eisenhower. "The choice was the President's," cried Ellender. "He has chosen to let our farm population dangle at the end of Secretary Benson's flexible noose." Oklahoma's Senator Robert Kerr supplied the oratorical topper: "From his ivory tower at the Augusta country club, where he has been completely insulated from the voice of the people, the President has again acted on the advice of little men who made his decision for him . . . The nails that have been driven into...
...What caused this change?" In 1953 if he had been told that dramatics would hold a dominant position in the University in 1956, he would have said this would only be possible with a Harvard Theatre. The reasons for the turnabout in attitudes is not readibly explainable. Walter Kerr of the New York Herald-Tribune points to the recent surge of dramatic activity throughout the country as being based on a "removal of political suppression" and "economic prosperity," but at Harvard, students who have been active in drama since 1953 have a more empirical reason...
...only close match of the day, Dale Junta, playing in the number two spot, barely defeated Tom Kerr, 1-6, 6-4, 8-6. Kerr, a tall left-hander, is one of the most erratic players in New England and is capable of exceptional play when he is on his game...