Word: beate
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...that they seem to want to. The rest of the first side of the album with songs like "Bad Brain" and "It's a Long Way Back" fit well into standard punk molds: perfect 4/4 time, straight drum beat and guitar lines with the subtlety of a jack hammer, or a seal-clubbing expedition...
Well, all-American Lance, who beat Harvard 4-3 in overtime last February, was just okay (one goal, three assists), but the real story in Cornell's 4-2 win over the Crimson last evening was the performance of high-scoring sophomore Brock Tredway. Tredway used Nethery's set-ups for three goals in the first two periods and left Harvard with its second straight well-played loss and 13th setback of the season...
...Bertagna said, "the girls started getting lazy--we knew we were better at that point." Bowdoin took advantage of some sloppy passing to beat Crimson netminder Nelia Worsely (who stopped 10 of 11 shots on the night) to cut the margin...
...talents was never fully accepted, as if his name and his great fortune somehow stood in his way. Like so many other figures in American history, he desperately wanted to be President. He knew he was qualified; it galled him that men he felt had less ability repeatedly beat him out for the post. He was more a man of the people, more at ease in crowds than less wealthy politicians, yet he never seemed to be totally trusted. His money hurt him in a society where populist currents still run strong, and his liberalism prompted his own party...
...tired rewrite men, television criticism did not really become a respectable calling until the beginning of this decade, when newspapers belatedly began to see that they were giving pitifully short shrift to the country's most important cultural phenomenon. No-nonsense reporters and respected critics were assigned the beat, and sharp, analytical commentary soon came to the TV page. Critics like Tom Shales, 33, of the Washington Post, and Marvin Kitman, 49, of Newsday, are masters of the lampoon. The new breed can also level their targets with sheer ferocity. One recent example from the Boston Globe...