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Word: corcoran (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Crimson matmen Milt Yasunaga at 126 pounds and 158-pounder Jim Corcoran were the only grapplers to register decisions against their Princeton opponents...

Author: By Francis T. Crimmins jr., | Title: Grapplers Lose to Princeton, Pin Penn in Triangular Meet | 2/3/1975 | See Source »

...Richardson, wrestling at 134, Tim Corcoran at 158 and Bruce Johnson, weighing in at 167, all pinned their hapless MIT opponents. Richardson did the quickest work, dropping Jody Silver at 0:43, while Corcoran pinned John Thoere at 3:19 and Johnson flattened Peter Haag...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Grapplers Pin a 35-11 Loss on MIT | 1/15/1975 | See Source »

Another freshman, Jim Corcoran, clinched the Crimson victory 38 seconds later as he pinned Dartmouth 158-pounder Matt Kramer faster than the bewildered Kramer could say "full nelson." The two pins stretched the Crimson lead to 27-2, to mathematically eliminate the Big Green...

Author: By Francis T. Crimmins jr., | Title: Bonebenders Contort Big Green in Ivy Opener | 1/13/1975 | See Source »

Thomas G. ("Tommy the Cork") Corcoran was a 32-year-old near genius who helped Franklin Roosevelt redesign the Federal Government and change the American way of life. He is still around Washington, a peppery 73, keeping an eye on things. He believes that few creative changes have been made in our domestic affairs since 1938, the year Roosevelt began to turn to confront Adolf Hitler. It is Corcoran's further observation, delivered with charming acerbity, that we now need many fundamental readjustments in our national life-style of the magnitude of those F.D.R. instituted, and that if Gerald...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Look Homeward, Gerald Ford | 12/9/1974 | See Source »

...there are people like Corcoran who believe we must refocus our concern and energy on domestic affairs. In that context, the remark able Henry Kissinger becomes, oddly enough, a kind of problem. There was just a hint at Vladivostok that he was seducing Gerald Ford to walk the same primrose path of summitry that Nixon trod. ∎ That land of life is delightful with the urbane Kissinger as tour director. He brings those big fat briefing books that lay the whole plan out. It is all very coherent and tidy, a given schedule with largely predictable results that rest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Look Homeward, Gerald Ford | 12/9/1974 | See Source »

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