Word: craig
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...then, of course, there were the Olympics. For a few weeks in the winter of 1980, you couldn't escape the name Dave Silk, just like you couldn't get away from the names Eruzione, O'Callahan and Craig. It was a name famous for a good reason: Silk, in the seven games at Lake Placid tallied twice and got three assists, including two against the Russians. That's one way of getting your name in the papers, not to mention the papers in hour hair--at tickertape parades...
...even if they do make it into the limelight, the task is by no means easy. Jim Craig, whose Olympian goaltending needs little introduction, spent much of last year off the ice and in a dispute with his employers, the Boston Bruins. This year, sans dispute. Craig is sidelined with a broken leg. But then, no one ever said pro hockey was a cushy line of business.For JIM CRAIG playing the pros hasn't been pure pleasure...
...tenth year at Harvard and his fifth as both men's and women's coach, Walker has guided what he describes as an "evolution" in Harvard diving. Nationally recognized, Walker has coached several U.S. international teams, and at the University of Minnesota he helped Craig Lincoln win a bronze medal in the 1972 Munich Games...
...same time, the fear in the White House of spiraling deficits was quite real, and the agonizing over tax increases entirely genuine. In fact, TIME has learned that Paul Craig Roberts, the most hard-line opponent of tax boosts in the Administration, will resign this week as an Assistant Treasury Secretary to become a professor of economics at Georgetown University. Roberts thinks that the President's program has been subverted by advisers who do not really believe in supply-side economics...
...interest loans through the city's Industrial Development Corporation. But because of the Bulletin's operating losses and severance obligations ($12.5 million), few believe that a purchaser will step forward. During a newsroom meeting last week, a sports writer put a tough question to Executive Editor Craig Ammerman and Publisher N.S. ("Buddy") Hayden: "What should I tell my wife?" Hayden sighed, then answered: "I don't know what to say. Prepare for the worst." The same advice would seem to apply in New York-and during the coming years, in other cities too. -By Janice Castro. Reported...