Word: stanzas
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Manhattan's Communist Daily Worker printed a translation of a poem composed to extol his war in Indo-China by Viet Nam's spaghetti-bearded Red Boss Ho Chi Minh. In one stanza Ho seemed to allow that sometimes he lounged back in headquarters, boozing it up while his boys were out sniping at the French: "Leisure after work/on army affairs; autumn wind/ autumn rain and autumn cold/ Chills; then one hears/the sound of flutes/coming through the hills;/guerrillas have returned/and I rejoice that wine enough/ is left for them...
Hall knotted the contest near the three-quarter mark in the third stanza, and the game turned into a helter-skelter battle for a winning goal which lasted until the end of regular play...
Poet Archibald MacLeish, bucking the pessimistic tide that often damns man's material progress, dashed off a ten-stanza Poem in a Festival of Art in Boston at the Public Garden, then headed there to read it. Gist of Poem: "Is it the city or heart that's wrong . . . / O hush! There is a silence in this place, / For all the chattering gears that grind, a grace / Of present expectation in this ground . . . / No city stands but is the image of the heart...
Captain Dexter Lewis led the varsity with four goals and two assists, while Deke Smith and Johnny Lane tallied twice each. Sophomore Dick Mackinnon looked good in the crease, letting in only three markers for three periods. Tech scored twice late in the final stanza and the lanky goalie hastily reentered to finish the contest...
Captain Dexter Lewis assisted Gale for a Crimson tally at twelve and a half minutes of the third stanza, but Southall, unassisted, retaliated five seconds before the period closed. Foehl scored on an assist from Southall at 4:23 of the final quarter, and Southall made it 6 to 2 a minute later. Hilliard closed the scoring on an unassisted play two and a half minutes before the match ended...