Word: cole
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Tredway flicked home his second at 15:27, intercepting a Neil Sheehy clearing pass for an unassisted, power play goal. And following a classic Greg Olson performance on a two-on-one break with Murray to trim the margin to two at 15:59, Bill Cole made it 4-1, taking a pass from Tredway, circling behind the net, and beating Whiston to the right post just 22 seconds before the end of the period...
Scoring: C, Tredway (Korling, Gallant) 0:44; C, Roeszler (Cole) 12:34; C, Tredway (unassisted) 15:27; H, Olson (Murray, Burks) 15:59; C, Cole (Tredway, Korling) 19:33; C, Habib (Tobin, Gallant) 16:25: H, Olson (Murray) 1:11; H, Murray (Olson, Code) 10:38; C, Roeszler (Tredway, Cole) 11:53; C, Tobin (Duffy, Habib) 13:17. Saves: C. Ellot 29; H. Whlston...
...highlights of any Harvard Krokodiloe concert comes with the group's rendition of Cole Porter's "Let's Do It." The Kroks, the 12-man cappella undergraduate singing group, always revises the lyrics of this randy war-horse to give it that unmistakable aroma of burning rubber--the smell of tires and gonads hot for another trip to Wellesley...
...this joy is infectious, and, combined with their refined style often makes for superb concerts. A cappella singing is an acquired taste, but the Kroks' impeccable song selection (mostly Cole Porter, Irving Berlin and Richard Rodgers stories of love and destruction), pleasing harmonies and prissily risque patter, all in the sensuous acoustics of Sanders create an enticing package. The Kroks don't just sing, they perform, with that Preppie obsession about sex used occasionally to roaring success, and never, in my experience, to disappointment...
DIED. William ("Cozy") Cole, 71, versatile and spellbinding jazz percussionist whose 1958 recording of Topsy became the only drum solo ever to sell a million copies; of cancer; in Columbus. Born in East Orange, N.J., Cole made his first records with the legendary Jelly Roll Morton in 1930 and later played with such jazz greats as Cab Calloway, Benny Goodman, Dizzy Gillespie and Louis Armstrong...