Word: cabrera
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Last week, at the annual meeting of the American Physical Society in Washington, D.C., scientists learned that the search for the elusive monopole may have paid off. A paper submitted to Physical Review Letters by Blas Cabrera, 35, an assistant professor of physics at Stanford University, reports an "event" that Cabrera thinks may have been caused by a monopole. If Cabrera is correct, his discovery could validate the various "grand unification theories," which postulate the existence of superheavy monopoles and hold that three natural forces-electro-magnetism, radioactivity and nuclear bonding-are manifestations of a single grand force. Monopoles might...
COLUMBIA 24, LAFAYETTE 14: Lion John Witkowski is a fine quarterback. Joe Cabrera and Jim (PT 109) McHale form a strong backfield. Columbia didn't look all that bad losing to, Harvard last week...
That proved fortunate, for when Cabrera couldn't bang it over on third down, Columbia coach Bob Naso elected to go for the gimme 18-yard field goal, and when short distance specialist Dick Cory missed it, the Lions came up emptyhanded on their first--and best--drive...
...front five didn't pass rush effectively (no sacks and very little penetration all day), they were superb at stopping Cabrera, who ran for 597 yards a year ago, and pesky sophomore Jim McHale. Middle guard Scott Murrer (five tackles and three assists) and lineman Tom Clark and Pierre Sauve led the way, while sophomore Azelby--pressed into action when Stinn suffered a concussion on the fifth play from scrimmage--made four tackles and picked off a pass to snuff a Columbia drive...
...driving a little more than 85 yards on the first possession of Saturday's 23-6 Harvard win, the Columbia offense stalled just two feet from six points. On third down the Harvard defensive line, with end Kevin McHugh leading the charge, rose up to crush Lion halfback Joe Cabrera for no gain. With fourth and one staring him down, Columbia head coach Bob Naso elected--the chagrin of both his players and their fans notwithstanding--to be certain of first blood with a safe 18-yd. field goal. Except that a Columbia field goal is about as safe...