Word: bucks
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Harv.-B.U. Yale-Colg. Corn.-Buck. Br.-Penn. Dart.-H.C. Prin.-Col. Last week's record Season Pct. Jim Reinig Harvard 26-14 Yale 24-10 Cornell 17-10 Brown 28-17 Dartmouth 12-10 Princeton 20-7 4-4 .500 Andy Quigley Harvard 24-7 Yale 29-6 Bucknell 17-9 Brown 35-14 Dartmouth 14-12 Princeton 32-13 5-3 .625 Rich Doherty Harvard 24-15 Yale 30-21 Cornell 26-20 Brown 29-19 Dartmouth 14-10 Princeton 20-7 5-3 .625 Bill Stedman Harvard 25-19 Yale 27-19 Cornell 23-12 Brown...
...Zowee. So far, the horde of promotions has drawn a beneficent nod from the guardians of tradition. "I see no harm in these Bicentennial products," says Robert Williams, executive secretary of the New York chapter of the Sons of the Revolution. "There's nothing wrong with making a buck. Free enterprise is the thing that has made this country go zowee." Another reason some approve: makers of souvenirs that meet the modest standards of the Government's American Revolution Bicentennial Administration pay royalties for the use of ARBA's imprimatur, and those fees...
...Bicentennial ad. Beneath a photo of the familiar fife-and-drum trio marching off into the mist with backs turned to the camera, the ad asserts: "Soon 1976 will be gone, along with the bicentennial. All the hooplas will be over. And all the guys who made a fast buck in Early American furniture will be looking for something new. And so it goes. Except that there will still be one company...
...calls for a much larger, centralized recruiting office of up to 40 universities, although it doesn't include an automatic application review by all participating universities. The problems with Bok's plan are similar to those in the GSAS recruiting idea, in terms of passing the buck onto the centralized system. But Bok's additional proposals for more fellowships for minorities and for summer programs exposing minority students to graduate schools are both good and should be included in the overall strategy to attract more minority students to graduate schools...
...football exhibition season, like baseball spring training, was geared to getting players into shape. It was a time for testing rookies, rendering the excess fat off veterans, and giving fans a chance to see some scrimmaging for a nominal price. No longer. With owners trying to make a buck wherever they can, preseason games have turned into a top-price gouge for fans (tickets can run as high as $10). More important, the early games can be dangerous, injury-inducing torture for athletes forced to play hard before their bodies are ready. By last week, with the regular season still...