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House members' parents and alumni from both sides turned out to scream, cheer, and celebrate at an event which some felt was far more important than the Crimson's last game of the season. As Hugh Foster '50, a Winthrop House "dad," commented. "This is really good football. And a lot of fun, That's my son playing for Winthrop...

Author: By Carla D. Williams, | Title: Crimson Triumphs | 11/20/1982 | See Source »

...typical football fan doesn't recognize or appreciate the accomplishments of an offensive guard. He doesn't cheer for the line man when a hole is created so Scottie McCabe can slip through for 15. He applauds only when he witnesses a Donnie Allard TD toss or a Jim Villenueava 42-yd field goal...

Author: By Andy Doctoroff, | Title: Mike Corbat | 11/16/1982 | See Source »

Wherever Bowie Kuhn has his shirts stuffed after next August, when baseball plans to let its tallest and most erect commissioner go, at least he will be able to cheer at the ball yard again, a sore deprivation these past 14 years. "I can't have a favorite team or a rooting interest," he once said with a sigh. "Sad, isn't it?" For Kuhn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Cashiering the Commissioner | 11/15/1982 | See Source »

...train is a community. At each stop, we dash down the platform to the food kiosk, hoping for anything other than pickles and kefir. The day of tomatoes, eight of us have to sprint for the last car, and all the passengers cheer. The Poles, embassy staff returning to Poland after three years in Peking, smoke heavily during the day and drink heavily at night. They sleep two to a berth, having wedged their luggage into the top bunks. The English, mostly students returning from a year in Peking, plug two-by-two into Walk-mans...

Author: By Sylvia C. Whitman, | Title: A Trans-Siberian Journey | 11/8/1982 | See Source »

González's campaign ended in Madrid, where a crowd of 200,000 gathered under floodlights to cheer him. Following an elaborate multimedia show, González appeared at the podium for his final pre-election speech. His intense, perspiring face was projected on a giant TV screen, erected over the center stage, that enabled the crowd to see the candidate's face from half a mile away. Dressed in a gray flannel suit and sporting fashionably long hair, González called the election "a plebiscite, which confronts the people with a choice between a Socialist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spain: Felipe's Decisive Victory | 11/8/1982 | See Source »

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