Word: scorings
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...seemed either happy or go-lucky. He cultivated his body as a trust; he not only refused to drink or smoke but also gave up coffee for fear it would spoil his reflexes. He once made up a list of 61 "character factors" in his diary, checked off his score at the end of each...
...picked him up for $4,000 in the annual minor-league draft. It was quite an investment. He possesses probably the strongest throwing arm of any outfielder in the business: from 420 ft. away, he has fired a perfect strike to the plate to catch a runner trying to score from third. Though he is only 5 ft. 11 in. and 185 Ibs., he can hit any pitch-good or bad, and with power, as Cincinnati Pitcher Milt Pappas found out on that extraordinary day last week...
...feet to them, were hard to come by. Eventually, he lined up a group, which today includes teachers, studio men, students and one lawyer, that could feel at home with everything from a quasi-classical passacaglia and fugue to raga time. After months of rehearsals, he brought in a score in 3⅔ time, and the band read it at sight. "That was the turning point," recalls Ellis. "The time barrier had been broken...
These 15 points in the jumps could have given the meet to the Crimson if everything had gone well elsewhere. But it didn't. Sophomore Bruce Hedendal. Heptagonal runner-up in the discus, fell down a flight of stairs Wednesday and didn't score in either the discus or the shot. Harvard's Heptagonal champion 440 relay blew all three of its passes to hand Army an easy win, and sophomore Dick Benka had an off-day in the shot put, scoring only one point...
...between Negro and white college students. "If a student has done well in high school, notwithstanding the fact that he has only reached the eighth or ninth grade level, and if he continues to do well in situations where he is judged on the basis of a curved score, he has no reason to think that he is something short of brilliant. Thus the student will likely make less effort to close...