Word: weathers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Playing in 94-degree weather with no breeses, Yale's Mike Nesty triumphed over Harvard's Frank Ripley in the singles final and then paired with teammate Bob Hetherington to beat Ripley and Crimson captain Paul Sullivan in the doubles...
...lacrosse team's whopping 13 to 7 vicotry over the varsity Saturday. En route to their second Ivy defeat of the season, the Crimson stickmen lost face-off after face-off, neglected to pick up loose ground balls, failed to clear consistently, and suffered heavily in the 99-degree weather. The Bulldogs didn't seem to mind the heat...
Sinatra's Hollywood detractors dismiss the charity tour as a stunt to camouflage his unappealing Rat Pack image. His last two films have been box office successes, but critically, they were far below Sinatra's standard. Then, too, he has sailed rough weather lately. Juliet Prowse left him, mournfully considering his receding hairline. Worse, President Kennedy shattered Frank when, on his recent visit to California, he opted for Bing Crosby's Palm Springs digs instead of the new "Presidential Wing" Sinatra had tacked onto his own Palm Springs home in great expectations...
...from off the green. I had to change my putter. I've always used one with a very light blade; it was fine for the fast greens I played on as an amateur. But as a pro, I had to be ready for any kind of green." The weather, said Nicklaus, was often worse than the course. "At San Diego, I had to learn how to play frozen greens. At the Bing Crosby National, I had to play with the rain coming at me sideways. Amateurs wouldn't have considered playing under such conditions...
Playing Jack Kennedy in the German version was Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard, who made his reputation as the laissez-faire-dealing architect of Germany's postwar prosperity. Seven weeks ago, as West German televiewers waited for the evening weather broadcast. Erhard's owlish face unexpectedly appeared on their screens. Coldly, the Minister warned that unless labor stopped pressing for higher wages (which went up almost 15% last year) and business stopped boosting prices, German exports might well be priced out of international markets...