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When he came up for auction at a 1975 summer sale of Kentucky yearlings, he was just Hip No. 128, an anonymous colt with an awkward bearing and a slightly skewed front foot. He was gaveled off at the paltry price, by thoroughbred standards, of $17,500, and led away to his new owners, Karen and Mickey Taylor. It seemed hardly an auspicious union-an unassuming yearling and a stable whose racing silks were just two years and a handful of horses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Seattle Slew Strides Home by Two | 5/16/1977 | See Source »

Some black stars, acknowledging their better performance, have developed amateur anthropological theories to explain it. To former Baltimore Colt Tight End John Mackey, superior black speed is simply a matter of the opportunities and exposures of childhood. "I was chasing rabbits as a kid," he recalls, "and I could outrun any white guy who was just jogging up and down the street. When they turn loose African athletes who have been chasing, say, cheetahs, they will rewrite the record books. It's not because they're black but what they've been doing." Other athletes see explanations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Black Dominance | 5/9/1977 | See Source »

...outstanding--Sudy Crusenberry and Lois Scott. Crusenberry is stringy, with a long horsey face; she looks like the breaking up of a hard winter. Scott is gregarious, aggressive, and big--a tough woman. At one point she laughs and reaches into her prodigious bosom and comes up with a Colt .32, and, still laughing, replaces it. You get the idea she'd use it. The power struggle between the two is glossed over, but Crusenberry becomes the leader of the women. When the men are hampered by injunction and fear, the Harlan women take over, walking picket duty, stopping scab...

Author: By Joseph Dalton, | Title: Seek Not Your Fortune Way Down In The Mines | 4/21/1977 | See Source »

Gibbens, who will fill the position vacated last spring when Henry F. Colt Jr. '46 took over the post of assistant vice president for alumni affairs and development, will also serve as an internal adviser to the University development officers...

Author: By Thomas W. Janes, | Title: Director of Development Post To Be Filled by Alfred Gibbens | 12/1/1976 | See Source »

According to Henry F. Colt, Jr. '46, assistant to the vice president for alumni affairs and development, "no definite plans have been made...

Author: By Thomas W. Janes, | Title: Harvard Studies Major Fund Drive Like Most Ivy Schools | 11/6/1976 | See Source »

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