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Word: skips (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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After the well-coordinated play turned in Thursday by the mid-fields Munro may well keep them in the same order, using in the first line Hank Wood, Captain Ron Huebsch, and Fred Horween; and Skip Baldwin, Chuck Edwards, and Todd Goodwin for the second...

Author: By Walter W. Bregman, | Title: Lacrosse Team Plays Boston Club In Exhibition Game This Afternoon | 4/11/1953 | See Source »

...Crimson ten took an early lead at 4:27 as Waring bounced a Curtis pass through goalie Pat Morris. At 9:55, mid-fielder Hank Wood picked off a toss from Captain Ron Huebsch 25 feet from the net, took two steps, turned, and fired in for the score. Skip Baldwin continued the drive at 12:50 when he grabbed a pass intended for attackman Monk Aiello and took advantage of the screen to backhand it in for the score...

Author: By Walter W. Bregman, | Title: Lacrosse Team Whips Delaware 7-3 | 4/10/1953 | See Source »

Captain Ron Huebsch, Skip Baldwin, and Jim Telfer comprised the starting midfield at the beginning of the trip, but Telfer separated a shoulder against Princeton and will be out of action for another week. Hank Wood, who had been playing second midfield along with Chuck Edwards and Todd Goodwin, moved up to the first midfield and Fred Horween moved up from the third to take his place...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lacrosse Ten Plays Delaware Today | 4/9/1953 | See Source »

...course, the Academy can only vote for those people and pictures already nominated, and the nominations often skip first-rate material. In the song department, for instance, the High Noon balled is easily best on the list, but the song sung by Zsa Zsa Gabor in Moulin Rouge did not even win a place on the ballots. Perhaps the Moulin Rouge balled would lose in the final vote, but surely it is more worthy of nomination than "Am I in Love" from Son Of Paleface...

Author: By Robert J. Schoenberg, | Title: The Popularity Contest | 3/18/1953 | See Source »

About the only thing Pakistan did have in good supply was people. Fortunately, among them were a few able men who knew government and how to train administrators. Somehow they put a government together and gave it enough meaning to hold together. They were forced to skip, a few things in those hurried early days-among them, a constitution. Last month Pakistan's five-year-old Constituent Assembly began to debate a "Basic Principles Report" that will be used as a guide for constitution-making. Best bet: a democratic republic with a strong executive, outside the British Commonwealth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PAKISTAN: Bristling, Beset Nation | 2/23/1953 | See Source »

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