Word: maloy
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...green's left end on defense was Donald Myers, and Holy Cross gained considerable yardage around his flank. He seemed to be quite susceptible to the deceptive ball-handling of Charles Maloy, the Crusader quarterback (as were most of the Dartmouth linemen at one point or another), and was often drawn well out of position...
...largely of men who played last year, showed remarkable poise and confidence Saturday, playing its first game under a now coach, against a favored opponent, and in front of a partisan audience. The outstanding addition to the squad, one of two sophomores on the starting team, is Charles Maloy, an extremely deceptive ball-handler and a very good passor...
Working with Maloy in the Cross backfield were fullback Bob Doyle and halfbacks Jon Turco and Mel Massucco. They are fast and they carry out their fakes with surprising effectiveness. The Holy Cross T lines up with Massucco behind the quarterback and Doylo and Turco to Massucco's left, Maloy can then fake to Massucco and hand off to Turco, or fake to both halfbacks and lateral out to Doyle. May Holy Cross plays start out as end runs, with the ball carrier knifing off tackle instead...
...case. The Horvitz brothers, he found, had made a "bold, relentless and predatory" attempt to establish a monopoly, had rejected advertising "solely ... to force these advertisers not to [use] an available mode of communication." Judge Freed found the Horvitz brothers, Business Manager D. P. Self, Editor Frank Maloy and the Journal guilty of a civil violation of the Sherman Act. In announcing that he would restrain the from rejecting advertising for such reasons, the judge added that this would in no way affect its "operations . . as an organ of opinion." The Jour planned to appeal the decision...
Thirty-five years ago, Frank Maloy Anderson, professor of history at the University of Minnesota and later at Dartmouth, set out to identify the anonymous diarist. This week he published his findings. He had at last located his man, and had come to a surprising and historically important conclusion about the diary itself...