Word: attacker
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...first half, Harvard had the wind at its back and stalled the powerful UMass offense (16 goals in four games) with four fullbacks and four halfbacks in what Harvard striker Walter Diaz called "a counter-attack style...
Rookie right-handers Jim Beattie and Ken Clay combined to totally shut down the vaunted Royals' hitting attack, allowing just two hits. Beattie (6-9), who graduated from Dartmouth just two years ago, did not allow a hit until Al Cowens led off the Kansas City fifth with a loop single to center...
...Perhaps there will be a change of mind. Syria is very extremist, would like to see us destroyed, etc., but Syria cannot attack us. It would be suicidal. Jordan will not attack us alone. They just can't do it. And Iraq is behind Jordan. So when we have peace between Israel and Egypt, we have de facto peace in the Middle East...
DIED. William S. Schlamm, 74, Polish-born writer and a former Communist who turned into a staunch conservative during the 1930s; of a heart attack; on Sept. 1, in Salzburg. Immigrating to the U.S. before World War II, Schlamm served as an editor of FORTUNE and assistant to Henry Luce in the 1940s, and in the 1950s helped create and edit National Review. Returning to Europe, he founded his own political magazine, Zeitbuhne, in West Germany...
DIED. W. Randolph Burgess, 89, former Treasury Department Under Secretary and U.S. Ambassador to NATO during the Eisenhower Administration; of a heart attack; in Washington, D.C. Schooled as a statistician, Burgess worked as a banker in New York for more than 30 years, first at the Federal Reserve, then at National City (now Citibank), before joining the Treasury in 1953. As Under Secretary for Monetary Affairs, he favored tight money policies, a balanced national budget and the gold standard. He resigned in 1957 when appointed NATO Ambassador, serving until...