Word: eamon
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...this soon changed. Cornell's swift midfielders kept the ball in their offensive end, and the all-American attack trio of French, Eamon McEneaney, and Jon Levine just passed Harvard to death. The fact that the Crimson got outshot, 64-22, despite winning 17 of the 32 faceoffs, attests to Cornell's ability to pass the ball and create scoring opportunities...
Cornell also boasts the two leading scorers in the nation from last year, all-American attackmen Mike French and Eamon McEneaney. Their unheralded sidekick, Jon Levine, is probably just as talented, and the Big Red has corralled a whole herd of fine middies too, led by all-Ivy pick Bill Marino...
...League, and said matter of factly several weeks ago that the Big Red should win the national championship. Maryland, Hopkins, and Navy still have something to say about that, but Cornell does not return the best attack in the country--All-America and Ivy League "Player of the Year" Eamon McEneaney, All-America and national scoring leader Mike French, and underrated Jon Levine. Add 2nd team All-America middie Bill Marino, and you've got a pretty hard team to beat...
Died. John Aloysius Costello, 84, twice Prime Minister of Ireland and former leader of the conservative Fine Gael party; of cancer; in Dublin. After his surprise victory in 1948 over his longtime rival, Fianna Fail Leader Eamon de Valera, Costello quipped, "I feel rotten. Last Saturday I was a free man." But he energetically pursued his task, breaking Ireland's final constitutional link to Britain with the repeal of the External Relations Act. Costello lost the prime ministership to De Valera in 1951, won it back in 1954, lost it again in 1957 and quit politics...
...nation whose heroes have often been martyred failures, Eamon de Valera survived and succeeded. Through a defeated insurrection and a lost civil war, "Dev" struggled to free and unite the nation that had adopted him. When he died last week in Dublin, 92 and nearly blind, few of his countrymen could recall a time when De Valera's gaunt, beak-nosed visage was not a part of Irish political life...