Word: cooperating
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Three Crimson grapplers advanced to the quarterfinals. Jim Corcoran (158 Ibs.) lost to Marty Schwartz of Yale, who went on to finish second. Sal D' agostino (190 Ibs.) was bested by Navy's Greg Cooper, Cooper, like Schwartz, wasn't defeated until the finals...
...course, Bowie was always more than merely jarring. To lump him with Alice Cooper, as many do, is a mistake. Despite Cooper's first name and penchant for mascara, his songs were as straight as the midwestern plains from which he came. Cooper's charm, nurtured by Zappa's aesthetic of ugliness, lies elsewhere, perhaps in the psychic territory of a sixth grader...
...Unlike Cooper's mischievousness, Bowie's energetic bisexuality partook of something more profound. In projecting his adrogynous persona, Bowie expressed not just changing attitudes toward homosexuality, but he was also working out the feminist's expansive concept of sex roles. He galvanized people by presenting not just rock songs, but the glimpse of a whole other kind of life. His counter-sexuality had the electrifying effect that the counter-culture had lost. As Dylan could moralize in '66 about Mr. Jones and his closed mind, so Bowie in '73 could chide the prudes and exhort his followers in "Changes...
Harvard was in command right from the start as the team of Malcolm Cooper (backstroke), Brent Haywood (breaststroke), Tim Neville (butterfly), and Kevin O'Connell (crawl) picked up seven points in the 400 medley relay with a time...
...highlight of the meet was the final 400 freestyle relay. Harvard raced Cooper, Dan Taylor, Depman, and Duncan Pyle, among others as the event turned into a melee of comedy...