Word: walts
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...such operatives as Pete Petrillo, Tom Gannon, Vince Moravec and Leo Flynn in the backfield, and Walt Coulsen, John Fiorentino, Eddie Davis, Howle Houston, Nick Rodis, and Chuck Glynn are on Harlow's third and fourth stringers, the Crimson has been hiding some fairly good ball players...
Somewhere deep inside Lincoln there was a kind of literary genius, as surely as there was in Edgar Allan Poe or Walt Whitman. It shines strong in his great state papers; it glows steadily in his lesser efforts. It is as unmistakable as the man himself, in the letter the President wrote Jan. 26, 1863, to the Union Army's Major General Joseph Hooker...
After further routine drills, Harlow put his second string into a scrimmage against a Jayvee eleven while the first-stringers ran through a lengthy signal drill. Standout in the scrimmage was Walt Coulson, whose defensive end play won praise from Harlow...
...Walt W. Rostow (Yale '36) was a Rhodes Scholar just before the war. He enlivened many an Oxford sherry party by banging out a syncopated protest of his own composition (Claustrophobia Blues) on the piano. When not busy harmonizing or playing rugger for Balliol College, he was apt to be heavily engaged in a bull session. Later he got his Ph.D. at Yale and taught economics at Columbia before spending 32 wartime months abroad, ending up as an O.S.S. major in bombing intelligence. On that assignment he got to know W. Averell Harriman, who as U.S. Ambassador later...
...probably the most annoyed, judging from their attitude as displayed during the game. Center, Milt, protested vehemently and continuously, especially when he thought Jim Noonan had grabbed a pass in violation of the rule forbidding contact with a pass by two players on the same team in succession. And Walt, the big end, almost came to fisticuffs once with Pete Petrillo...