Word: pounds
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...kept undefeated Ed Keating at 123 pounds but the double-jointed sophomore can easily switch with 130 pound Dick Adams. Both are versatile and quick...
Chandler is undefeated but a weak spot appears in the class he isn't in. Against Columbia it was the 167-pound class where Len Miller lost. Against Brown, senior Tony Caimi dropped a 9 to 0 decision...
Leading the field events are the 35-pound weightmen, led by Leo Daly, with Tony Gianelly running, or throwing, a close second. Daly, whom Wilson calls "powerful, but crude," has "got it," he says, and so has Gianelly. Third is Pete Harpel, who although compiling the best competitive mark of the three, does not show quite the potential of the other...
...pound was steady and increasingly in demand in the world's marts. In New York, 90-day futures were quoted at $2.81½ v. the official rate...
...wealthiest money bloc, the dollar area? At Sydney, the finance ministers agreed doughtily, as they did a year ago, that their objective is "a wider, freer system of trade and finance in which the convertibility of sterling is essential." But the fact is that convertibility-i.e., making the pound freely convertible into dollars-is no longer considered urgent. Partly the reason is economic realities. Experts agree that the Commonwealth cannot safely risk convertibility until dollar reserves have increased to at least three times their present level. Unofficially, British Treasury men reckon that that would take about 14 years...