Word: counts
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Adams won that semifinal contest by a 10-1 count and seemed like the team to bet on for the finals. But Kirkland, behind the pitching of Bob Rosenberg, held the hot Adams House bats in check...
Brandeis is a former victim of the streaking Crimson. The Judges lost a tight one on the 2nd of May by a 3-2 count. This was certainly no indication of either Brandeis's greatness nor Harvard's poorness. It's just hard to get psyched for every game and especially difficult when you're facing non-Eastern League competition...
...argue with Peter C. Berg as to whether all showings of Casablanca are for educational purpose. I cannot, however, let pass his aspersions on my sentimentality. I am, Sir, a man who weeps at the playing of the Marseillaise each time he sees Casablanca (fourteen times, at most recent count), and I would gladly abandon my writs and demurrers to follow Ilsa Lund to the ends of the earth. I do not know who Mr. Berg may have in mind as a man whose heart is his least vulnerable spot. I suggest he round up the usual suspects. James...
...away from the creeping tide of the Watergate scandal as possible. Everyone, that is, except the city's 10,000 lawyers. Attorneys in the capital-and a few from outside the city-are being drawn to the case like gulls to a fish fry. By one rough count, 40 private attorneys have so far been hired to work on civil and criminal matters related to Watergate. They could not ignore such mixed lures as a desire to be where the action is, a professional responsibility to provide representation, a fascination with the legal complexities, the potential for publicity...
...once a somnolent fishing city, has become the undisputed center of the oil rush. Some 250 companies, many of them American-owned, are supplying everything from helicopters to hot meals for the drillers; unemployment in the city has dropped to 2.7%, half the Scottish average. But Aberdonians do not count the boom an unmixed blessing. Oilmen confide that the danger of a pipeline break under the North Sea is high. Many Scots worry that some day a tide of oil will roll in from the sea, burying their sandy beaches and destroying watering spots for migrating swans and geese...