Word: contacting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Scratching Thrown In. Or so it seemed. The press releases like to say that the Derby combines the speed of hockey with the contact of football, but it also has all the hoked-up histrionics of professional wrestling. In most of the "fights," the punches are pulled but they still send skaters sprawling. When the girls roll onto the Masonite track, the contact becomes more genuine-with shrieking, scratching and hair pulling thrown in. The female heavy is Joan Weston, a $20,000-a-year blonde Bomber who sends opponents flipping over the guard rails with one twitch...
Hardy was the Crimson's leading scorer. Dover added 13 and Gallagher, his contact lenses still lost and so bothered by regular glasses that he tried to play without an optical corrective...
Moger led Brown scorers with 18 points. Kahn, Purvis, and Roger Wakefield all scored in double figures. For Harvard, Gallagher, playing for the first time without his contact lenses--he had to wear glasses because he lost the lenses--had 16 points. Mike Janczewski and Dover had 13 apiece, and Gustavson...
...believe that students in the second and third year have much to contribute to first-year students. But the energies and abilities of upperclass students are not now utilized as extensively as possible, and the lack of contact with upperclass students contributes to the isolation that many students feel in the first year. Through an increase in the functions and membership of the Board of Student Advisors--or the creation of a new organization--upperclass students might be encouraged to participate on a voluntary basis in evaluating and advising first-year students...
...friendly and hip young managers are widely respected throughout the rock industry, and especially so by rock musicians. Most of the groups who appear here seem genuinely pleased with the hassle-free treatment they receive from their handlers at the Tea Party. The importance for rock groups of sympathetic contact with the managements of the clubs they stop at on tour should not be underestimated. Eric Clapton explains the Cream's notorious record of poor live performances by saying that the groups was often harried by insensitive officials at its gigs. A rock group, apparently, plays best where it feels...