Word: pike
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...England lineman, Captain Wally Kilrea, who scored all three goals against the varsity last Saturday, leads the Bulldog first line tonight. Chances for a Blue victory depend on his endurance together with that of his veteran wings, Dix Pike and Leigh Quinn. Coach Murray Murdoch will play the three more than half the game if he follows his nearly successful New Haven strategy...
Main factor in Yale's near upset was Coach Murray Murdoch's ability to solve his squad's greatest problem--weak second and third lines. The Eli first line of Dix Pike, Captain Wally Kilrea, and Leigh Quinn, one of the strongest in the league, was on the ice for more than half the game. Kilrea was the Blue star, scoring all three of his team's goals...
...Crimson lost the lead at 7:25 of the first period on a pass from left wing Pike out to Kilrea and a quick tally past unsuspecting Flynn. Then the varsity began a comeback fight which continued until the third period. Ed Mrkonich slapped in the tieing score at 4:11 of the period on an accidental face-off pass from Captain Norm Wood...
...Ernie Emerling listed the categories of "approach" angles for promotion campaigns: 1) Clinch ("As basic as Adam and Eve") ; 2) See (SEE THE WILD ANIMALS STAMPEDE. SEE THE MARTYRS THROWN TO THE STARVING LIONS); 3) Sincere ("A dignified, editorial type of ad . . . THIS THEATER is PROUD TO ANNOUNCE . . ."); 4) Pike's Peak or Bust ("Jean Harlow kicked off the new trend . . ."); 5) How Much Is That Girlie 'Gainst the Lamppost? ("Such an illustration tells, without words, that the lady is shady"); 6) Musical Comedy ("Must be illustrated with a smiling, toothy twosome and be liberally peppered with prancing...
...expansion is paid for by money that otherwise would have been paid in taxes. For this reason, and the fact that the quick write-off has been misused by some corporations, Congress' Hardy Subcommittee has denounced the policy as "the biggest bonanza that ever came down the Government pike." To many companies the policy was a bonanza. But there is no doubt that the net gains of quick amortization have been great enough to override its faults. The current loss in taxes will probably be made up eventually by taxes on expanded corporate incomes, just as the federal...