Word: beate
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...wins pulled Harvard's league record up to 3-2 and 6-9 overall. Penn which beat Brown 72-67 on Friday and Princeton, which lost to Brown 62-61 on Saturday are tied for first place in the Ivies. Both have 4-1 Ivy records. The Crimson has two important games at home this weekend with Yale on Friday night and Brown on Saturday night Brown must win the game to maintain title hopes...
With some key injuries forcing Lee to reshuffle the Crimson lineup on Friday, the Harvard grapplers had little hope to beat the powerful Tigers...
...house for his wife and son in Montreal. When the season opened with a victory against the Stanley Cup Champion Flyers in Philadelphia, Vachon and the Kings felt that this might be their year. "That win gave us a lot of confidence," says Vachon. "We realized we could beat anyone." Pulford may be more realistic when he says, "I cannot tell my players they'll stay abreast of Montreal because I don't believe it myself." Then he adds with a grin, "Mind you, we'll give them a helluva run for the money." The Kings have...
...left foot so that the partners can face each other diagonally and rhythmically throw punches into the air. Next they move into a contact dance, as precisely orchestrated as a waltz, during which the male rains soft blows on the girl's derrière, striking her on beat. Some partners also aim mighty kicks at each other-without contact...
...Rooney Goes to Washington, Veteran TV Writer-Producer Andrew A. Rooney is allowed to poke into agency offices, asking impertinent questions and sizing up the federal establishment. The winner of an Emmy and other awards, Rooney has written TV essays on such subjects as doors, chairs and bridges. His beat is not politics, and at first his meanderings through the capital seem almost pointless. Yet he is a master at extricating the revealing from the commonplace, and he soon accumulates enough eccentric encounters to indicate that Franz Kafka would feel at home in Washington today...