Search Details

Word: walts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Gymnasts held that margin most of the second period, and increased it to 59 to 50 with only a minute and three-quarters left. Four baskets in rapid succession--two by a much-improved Walt McCurdy, and one each by Rockwell and Hauptfuhrer narrowed the gap, but they weren't quite enough...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Springfield Stuns Crimson Quintet | 2/11/1948 | See Source »

...Walt McCurdy regained a flash of his mid-season mastery to help knot Saturday's photofinish tilt, and Bill Prior and John Rockwell looked better than ever. They'll need to be. After tonight it will be all work, all Ivy League. Probably Starting Lineups HARVARD SPRINGFIELD Hauptfuhrer lf Hazon Rockwell rf Burke Prior c Kubachka Brady lg Barker Gannon rg Sullivan

Author: By Ronald M. Foster jr., | Title: Quintet Faces Springfield at Garden | 2/10/1948 | See Source »

...Steve Davis enter the game as the first substitute instead of Walt McCurdy, who sent the game into overtime with four quick points in the final seconds?. Harper said yesterday that Davis looked immense in practice during the past week and deserved a chance to get into action...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Rough Army Quintet Edges Crimson, 59-57 in Overtime | 2/9/1948 | See Source »

...first Workshop guinea-pigs was Sterling North, who is probably the most widely syndicated of all U.S. book reviewers (24 newspapers). Five years ago he had written a pallid little juvenile called Midnight and Jeremiah, which Walt Disney was interested in screening. North rewrote the story into a screen version for Disney and a novel (So Dear to My Heart) for Doubleday. Disney had the story tested by Sindlinger and North obligingly made the Workshop-indicated alterations (which he says were minor). Since then the book has sold 25,000 copies. North was "genuinely converted," he said. "People who scoff...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: You Too Can Help Write a Book | 2/2/1948 | See Source »

...well in 1947. The estimated net of $100,000,000 was down from the alltime peak of 1946, but it was still far better than in any peacetime year. Some companies that had been on thin ice a few years ago were now on solid ground. Last week, Cartoonist Walt Disney reported that on his gross of $6,619,912 he had netted $307,075, his best ever. (He had not even taken into consideration $450,000 in blocked foreign earnings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Paradise Lost? | 1/19/1948 | See Source »

First | Previous | 620 | 621 | 622 | 623 | 624 | 625 | 626 | 627 | 628 | 629 | 630 | 631 | 632 | 633 | 634 | 635 | 636 | 637 | 638 | 639 | 640 | Next | Last