Word: smithing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Smith & Keynes. Galbraith's defenders pooh-pooh much of the criticism as little more than naked envy. "His tremendous vogue is very annoying to many university economists," observes the University of California's (La Jolla) Seymour Harris, a onetime Harvard colleague. "They reason that anyone with that kind of rapprochement with the general public just has to be a lousy economist. It's not true. He's the most-read economist of all time. Not even Adam Smith has been read as much." Galbraith, adds Economist James Warburg, "is the most outstanding explorer of economics since Keynes." There are those...
...biggest win of my life" Terrell said after his victory. "My forehand and backhand drives were strong, my drop shots were effective, and I was running better which enabled me to stay in there when I was fooled," he added. Terrell lost in the quarter-finals to J. Smith Chapman of Montreal...
With seven minutes to play Jack Garrity took a long bomb from Ben Smith at the B.U. blue line and skated in ahead of two defensemen. The Crimson captain faked once, pulled the puck to the left, and shot, to see the puck ricochet off goalie Jim McCann's sprawled...
Garrity led the Crimson skaters roaring onto the ice for a third-period comeback, but it was not Harvard's night. Smith's shot 30 seconds into the period lay frustratingly at the edge of the crease out of McCann's notice, but no Crimson player found...
...with less than ten minutes to play, Smith's sloppy defense caught up with Harvard and B.U. captain Jack Parker pushed in Eddie Wright's pass from the edge of the crease...