One was worse, between 1942-45 during World War II. For New York hockey fans, the bizarre saga unfolded after the Rangers won ...
In the years following World War II the Rangers boasted two of the most likeable centers in franchise history. Furthermore, ...
From 1943 through 1946, more than 3,400 prisoners (including 15 Nazi generals) were processed at Fort Hunt, according to ...
World War II began in September 1939 and by ... Maple Leafs lost captain Syl Apps to the Canadian Army while the 1941-42 first place Rangers captain Art Coulter now was a sailor in the U.S ...
The American 5th Army had invaded months earlier ... the infantry could follow in their sleds,” one World War II-era newsreel said at time, calling the concept the “modern equivalent of ...
Army Rangers were a small, elite fighting force often referred to as “spearheaders” for being the first invasion forces on beaches during World War II. That was certainly true on D-Day ...
The Army-Navy game kept going during World War II, contributing to one of the most significant chapters in the rivalry's long history. The Army-Navy game is as much a part of college football as ...
World War II Army Ranger Thomas Bearpaw was recently posthumously inducted into the Oklahoma Military Hall of Fame during the ...
You had to have nerves of steel to root for the Blueshirts during World War II. It's not that the Rangers were bad – or even worse – THEY WERE WORSE THAN WORSE. Not that it was the New Yorkers ...
In the years following World War II the Rangers boasted two of the most likeable centers in franchise history. Furthermore, Don Raleigh and Edgar Laprade owned two of the best nicknames – ever.