Word: redness
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...hour later Benjamin faced the Big Red's Nat Cravener in the two-mile. The two men raced neck-and-neck until Cravener passed Benjamin with two laps to go. Again Benjamin turned on his overwhelming finishing kick, winning this time by more than 15 yards in the meet record time...
Handsomely mounted on a white horse, India's Prime Minister Nehru last week cantered up a road in the hill resort of Mussoorie. Looking as fit as a much younger man and wearing a red rose in his buttonhole, 69-year-old Jawaharlal Nehru dismounted at Birla House, a large English-style cottage, and strode across the green lawn in the glittering afternoon sunshine that drenched the surrounding fir trees and the distant snowy peaks of the Himalayas. A line of Tibetan officials bowed to Nehru, presented him with an armload of ceremonial white scarves. The curtains parted...
Then Princeton moved into Ithaca and shut out the Big Red 3 to 0 behind the four-hit pitching of erstwhile basketball hero Herman Belz, moving into a tie for first place with Navy. The strong first half of the Tigers' batting order, including brother Carl at first base, shortstop Bill McMillan and football idols Gene Locks and Mike Ippolito at third base and left field, pounded out eight hits and scored all the runs...
...field of six excellent runners will clash in the mile. The Big Red's Chuck Hill has a 4:13.3 clocking to his credit, and Penn's Ernest Tracy and John Jerbasi have both broken 4:20. Against these coach Bill McCurdy will send Dyke Benjamin, who ran 4:15.6 against Army; Jed Fitzgerald, who defeated his teammate in a 4:16.2 race a week ago, and Fred Howard, a 4:21 miler. Hill must be considered the favorite, but there has been talk this week of a 4:12 effort by Benjamin or Fitzgerald...
...date, B.C. has compiled an unimpressive record of three wins against four losses and a tie, but, as in many cases, this record belies the facts. B.C. coach Eddie Pellagrini, ex-utility infielder for the Red Sox, yesterday bemoaned the fact that his team, though a powerful group of hitters, has spent most of its time driving the ball into the waiting gloves of opposing fielders...