Word: leonarde
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...bridge as usual to make motion pictures of its gentle writhing under the wind. Soon after him came 25-year-old college student Winfield Brown, who paid his 10? pedestrian fee and walked across for the thrill. Approaching was a logging truck and an automobile driven by mild, baldish Leonard Coatsworth, reporter on the Tacoma News-Tribune. Mr. Coatsworth stopped to look at the undulations before he paid his toll. They were no worse than usual...
...Hiersteiner 2L, Des Moiner, Ia.; James L. Highsaw, Jr. 3L, Memphis, Tenn.; George E. Hill 2L, Burlington, Ia.; William Jordan, Jr. 2L, Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y.; John V. Kean 3L, Washington, D. C.; William C. Know, Jr. 3L, Winchester, Tenn.; Arthur L. Krenzien 2L, Omaha, Nebr.; Leonard E. Kust 2L, Madison, Wis.; George M. Lehr 3L, Jersey City, N. J.; Nathanael A. Lemke 3L, Milwaukee, Wis.; Laurence S. Locke 2L, Woodmere, L. I., N. Y.; Robert H. Loeb 3L, Birmingham, Ala.; Stanley M. Mansfield 3L, Waukegon, Ill.; Theodore Miller 3L, Cambridge, Mass.; John G. Moskovics 2L, West...
...York, N. Y.; Allan H. Smith 2L, Baker, Ore.; Edward A. Smith 2L, Worcester, Mass.; George A. Smith 3L, Atlanta, Ga.; William F. Smith 2L, Los Angeles, Calif.; Felix F. Stumpf 3L, Cambridge, Mass.; Robert O. Swados 3L, Buffalo, N. Y.; John R. Taylor 2L, Chicago, Ill.; Leonard Ugelow 2L, St. Albans, N. Y.; Sidney Werlin 2L, Malden, Mass.; and Edward D. Wynot 3L, Dover...
Such was the introduction of John Leonard ("Pepper") Martin to the big leagues and U. S. baseball fans. Born on a 29th of February of an Irish father and Dutch mother in Oklahoma, Pepper Martin had tussled with a rattlesnake as a tot, eloped at 24, kicked around in the minor leagues for seven years. Powerful and ungainly, he played baseball by main strength, sometimes throwing his bat at the ball, charging like a buffalo across the diamond, sliding into bases head first. The way he cut up ball fields made him the despair of ground keepers...
...hell. Reverse in Keepin' Myself For You, and makes good dancing...Count Basic cuts two sides of fast blues entitled The World Is Mad (OKEH), and stars the tenor sax of Lester Young, who plays some almost unbelievable jazz. Jo Jones and the rhythm section are exceptionally good...Harlan Leonard and his Kansas City Rockets show a lot of clean ensemble polish on A-La-Bridges (OKEH), a slow tune featuring a long tenor chorus. It's typical colored orchestration, not unlike Lunceford, though a little less elaborate...