Word: kingly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Carl Kludt, at 130, and Rick Sullivan, at 177, lost by decisions after one and two victories, respectively. Meanwhile, 147-pounder King Holmes, making his first start, joined Foster in the undefeated ranks with a clear-cut win. Other Crimson winners were Dave Skeels, in the opening 123-lb. match, and heavyweight Ted Robbins...
...what he regarded as the inferior black majority of his countrymen in permanent subjection. After him came the face of Black Africa nationalism- Ghana's Prime Minister Kwame Nkrumah in 1953. In the north, the same anticolonial stir-ups agitated the Arabs, and TIME showed the faces of King Mohammed V of Morocco, which won its independence in 1956, and of Ferhat Abbas, head of Algeria's rebel government-in-exile, whose story is not yet finished. Now comes young, vigorous Sékou Touré of Guinea, the man who said "No" to De Gaulle...
...their leaders in Toulouse, who fought the Spanish Civil War, but are now out of touch. Except for the Communists, almost all opposition groups are willing to see Spain's Bourbon monarchy restored, though only to reign, not to rule. Franco himself is committed to restoration of a king (probably 45-year-old Don Juan de Bourbon), though only after "the Caudillo is no longer with us because God wills it so." Result is that Franco's leniency toward Satrústegui was interpreted by many Spaniards not as a sign of weakness, but as the kind...
...stronger men in Black and will be looking for his fourth victory against two losses. At 123, Dave Skeels, who sustained one of the varsity's two losses at Columbia last Saturday, will try to get back into the win column at 123. A newcomer to the starting lineup, King Holmes, rounds out the team at 147, replacing the injured Nick Estabrook...
...raffle and is shipped off to spend three weeks in Cliché No. 4, Paris, with Cliché No. 5, a South American screen queen (Linda Cristal). But all at once the gravy train is stopped by Cliché No. 6: a service-nervous Nelly of a P.R. officer (King Donovan). The officer gets scared that the corporal, faced with an objective as tempting as the screen queen, will volunteer for Cliché No. 7, an action that is above and beyond the call of duty. And so he proclaims that the corporal is under Cliché No. 8, house...