Word: gladding
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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While three of Jordan's assistants are just getting oriented to Cambridge, his trainer, Jack Fadden, was glad to be back home. Fadden worked here from 1921 to 1935, when he went to Amherst, then to the Chicago White Sox and the New York Buildings. He looked out at the New head coach and the 80 men and said he would not have left the Bulldogs for any one but Lloyd Jordan...
...landing, and a smooth blade-cut left in the ice. Few skaters can think of attempting it; this year Button did two in a row, to make it a double-double without the slightest pause, covering 30 ft. in the whole involved maneuver in about two seconds. He was glad when the double-double was over. "Those two jumps tired me more than all of the rest of the time I spent out there," he said...
...drag me up to Helicon . . . [He was saved when the Communists fled before an approaching army unit.] Lots of the young ones who were up there are back in the village now. Two of them-Danos and Georgios -were with me in the voting line. But we're glad they've come back, and now all that's forgotten." Old Barba poured out some golden wine and drank a toast: "To something we all want: irene-peace...
...capital's most indefatigable diners-out. Truman talked easily and candidly, rambling over a wide range of subjects. What he said was wonderful, Krock told the President, and could he print it? Truman said sure, and if Krock wanted to hear more, he would be glad to see him at the White House...
...without sin cast the first stone." The first stone was promptly cast by 83-year-old Memphis Censor Lloyd T. Binford, who announced that he was banning Stromboli without seeing it, along with all other Bergman pictures. "She is a disgrace . . . to American women," he fumed. "I'm glad she's a foreigner...