Word: crowns
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...victory was Harvard's seventh straight this season and its fourth consecutive Ivy win. The Crimson now has only three games, one against rugged Brown and two with second division Princeton and Yale, to defend its Ivy crown successfully...
...Japanese royal family had a ball at the Gakushuin Kindergarten annual autumn games when four-year-old Prince Aya managed to take the play away from one of his classmates right in front of his proud oapa-san and mama -Crown Prince Akihite and Princess Michiko...
...Cream. Shorris, who is passionate for pop, obviously has spent long hours practicing what he preaches. He has elevated the previously ignored and mundane act of soft-drink selection into a fine art. With hors d'oeuvres, for example, he advises Squirt, or a dry cola like Royal Crown; with oysters, Bitter Lemon. "Any white soda pop," he suggests, goes well with chicken. Orange Crush, on the other hand, is "particularly nice with duck or goose." Red meat, of course, demands either Coca-Cola or Pepsi-Cola. Dr. Pepper is splendid with game. A celery tonic or chocolate phosphate...
...second half last Saturday it seemed that what was happening to Harvard was a replay of last year's Cornell game, this is not precisely the case. Last fall, the Crimson went to Ithaca with a 2-1 record, a solid defense, and high hopes of retaining the Ivy crown. It came back with its offense permanently stalled, a defense that had been shredded by a one-man attack, and its confidence badly shaken. Needless to say, the season wasn't extremely successful...
...Harvard's refusal to accommodate those who would crown a titlist as much as it is the Crimson's attitude towards the sport that baffles its critics. The reason that the Harvard oarsmen gave this year for racing Yale is the same one their predecessors gave in 1965, when the Crimson was allowed to have its will without much protest. It is the aura of tradition which surrounds the race, as well as the intriguing idea of a four-mile test of strength, that makes the Yale race so much more attractive to Harvard, and despite the fact that...