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Word: striped (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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First Dudley score was the result of Paul Quinn's interception of an Eliot pass on about the midfield stripe. He then heaved a 20 yard beauty to Cummings, who went over for the score. The try for point was blocked...

Author: By Dan H. Fenn jr., | Title: Funsters Upset Littlemen 6 to 0 Dudley Hands Eliot 13 to 0 Loss | 10/10/1941 | See Source »

With the ball well over the midfield stripe in Bunny territory, Chuck Griffith tossed a pass to Willy Cleveland, who made a sensational diving catch and landed on the two yard marker. Griffith again took the ball and plunged through left tackle for the score that won the game. It was Blanchard on the try for the extra point, but his kick was blocked...

Author: By William J. Elser, | Title: Deacons and Bell Boys Triumph As House Gridiron Season Starts | 10/9/1941 | See Source »

...signs in Harlem. Loren MacKinney's feat has already been mentioned--practically climbing up on the defending half back shoulders to snare a 31-yard Lee aerial and then on the following play snagging another 25-yard looper from Johnson to bring the Crimson to the Penn 14-yard stripe for their only serious threat...

Author: By David B. Stearns, | Title: SLUGGISH CRIMSON HAS WEAK PASSING ATTACK | 10/6/1941 | See Source »

Dusk was falling, and the last of the B. A. A. marathon spectators had left the Exeter Street finish line when Ed Souder, Jr. and Doug Shepardson, Adams House Seniors, dashed over the 26 mile, 385 yard stripe in a tie for 69th place and collapsed on the rubbing tables. Wearing only dripping shorts and wan smiles, the two men were a sorry sight...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Souder and Shepardson Earn $1.36 in 26 Mile Marathon | 4/21/1941 | See Source »

American museums--nine out of ten them--being cut on this stripe, it is easy to see why a tough, wiry Missouri artist like Thomas Hart Benton doesn't like them. He said recently that he would rather have his paintings hung in privies or night clubs than in an art gallery. Nobody pays attention to art in museums, he complained, except Harvard-trained aesthetes with "delicate wrists and swinging gaits." Billy Rose took him at his word, and now a juicy Benton nude hangs in New York's Diamond Horseslioe, where fat and plodding mid-Western businessmen can admire...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Art in Our Time | 4/14/1941 | See Source »

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