Word: stealingly
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Yale picked up their final two tallies in the eight inning. With one out, Eli center fielder Ray Lamontagne laid a perfect bunt down the third base line. The next batter, Ray Guidotti, walked, and a double steal out men on second and third. After the following batter struck out, Mathias singled to center, tallying both runners. When Ward hit Ray Walker, coach Norm Shepard relieved him with Ken Rossano, who struck out schiffino to end the frame...
Yale picked up their final two tallies in the eighth inning. With one out, Eli center fielder Ray Lamontagne laid a perfect bunt down the third base line. The next batter, Ray Guidotti, walked, and a double steal put men on second and third. After the following batter struck out, Mathias singled to center, tallying both runners. When Ward hit Ray Walker, coach Norm Shepard relieved him with Kon Rossano, who struck out Schiffino to end the frame...
...Norman Dello Joio's The Ruby, at Indiana University, Bloomington, had an effective libretto taken from the Lord Dunsany thriller about ruffians who steal the jeweled eye of an oriental idol only to meet the idol's gruesome, supernatural revenge. New Yorker Dello Joio, 42, known for the ballet On Stage! and the opera The Triumph of St. Joan, has mastered the stage idiom, molded his music in short, restless phrases. His score was notably effective, if not very modern...
...significant. Yugoslavia, after all, is not a member of NATO and is bound to the West only through the Turkish-Greek triangle and United States military support. But the Soviet actions are important because they are typical of a new, positive Kremlin foreign policy which may well steal a long strategic march on the more rigid policies of the United States...
...noted magazine writer quite graciously pointed out a few years ago, when comparing the University's library to the Library of Congress, that although the Washington collection is officially larger, Harvard's library is in fact bigger. "This is because most of the senators steal books from the Library of Congress," the writer noted. Such praise is gratifying, especially when many people often have wondered what French assemblymen do in the Bibliotheque National. Nevertheless, to be completely honest, someone should point out that Harvard professors, while they do not steal Widener's books, do quite often "keep then indefinitely...