Word: lefts
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...best example of this work came right after Harvard's second touchdown. Jack Hanlon returned Halaby's kickoff 21 yards up the left sideline, and the Quakers, with Fred Doelling and Hanlon running brilliantly, moved to a first down on the Crimson eight-yard line. Three charges into the Harvard defenses gained only six yards, and on fourth down the powerful Hanlon was stopped for no gain at the Harvard two-yard mark by Dave Cappiello and Eric Nelson...
...individual level, the game served to remind observers that Chet Boulris is one of the finest backs to have played in the Ivy League for some time, a fact often obscured by Harvard disappointments over the past few years. For the team as a whole, the victory left the Crimson with a 2-2 record in Ivy play and a slim chance for the Ivy title. But more significantly, the win definitely established Harvard as a tough team to be reckoned with during the closing weeks of the season.CHET BOULRIS (40) drives off-tackle for the University's second touchdown...
Egged on by an enterprising photographer, a slim blonde airlines clerk walked hesitantly toward New York's Governor Nelson Rockefeller, holding up a small toy elephant for his autograph. In the midst of a smile and a wave as he left his Convair at Chicago's Midway Airport, Rocky suddenly froze when he saw her. Throwing up a defensive hand and moving away, he brusquely set the tone of an uncertain week: "I'd not like to stress anything political. I'm sorry...
Grin Returns. Next morning Politico Rockefeller rose like a new day. Into his hotel suite for breakfast came a Wisconsin delegation which left enthusiastically with the word that Rocky probably would be speaking "somewhere" in their state on his return from California and Oregon next month. Several Illinois Republican bigwigs dropped in for a chat, and National Committeeman Morton Hollingsworth observed: "I would have no fears as a Republican if he should be elected...
Barrel Roll. Details of what happened next would have to await a Civil Aeronautics Board investigation. It may have been that Berke failed to correct with his left rudder in time, or inadvertently applied more right. The 707 flipped on its back. The gut-pounding stress was too much for the 248,000-lb. plane, and ordinarily the wings might have torn loose. But the 707 was designed to lose its engines under such strain, rather than its wings-and three engines ripped loose, plummeted to earth...