Word: fines
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...squad's most impressive win came against Brown, which Harvard had been unable to beat for several years. Down 2-1 at halftime, Harvard erupted for eight goals, three apiece by Landolt and Phil Fine, to dump the Bruins...
Zuckerman's team-leading scoring total broke the freshman record set by varsity star John Ince, who lead the Ivy league in scoring this season. Behind Zuckerman in scoring were Landolt and midfielder Rick Fine...
...emerge from its cocoon. Most of the enzyme crystals were on two cone-shaped structures on the face, called maxillae, which scientists had hither-to believed useless to the silk moth. Kafatos also found concentrated enzyme solution in the maxillae's cells, which squeeze the solution out through fine tubes leading to the surface of the maxillae. The enzyme, mixed with the liquid of the old silk tubes, gets painted over the cocoon's tip, thus dissolving the cocoon's glue and enabling the moth to push the strands apart and escape...
...indictment against the five men today is based on a section of the Universal Military Training and Service Act. The maximum penalty upon conviction is five years in prison and $10,000 fine...
...most exciting presentation proved to be the sacrilegious, frivoulous, ridiculous Trio of Susan Golod and Peter Mansbach from Brandeis. The two prance about the stage with a desk chair (the third in the trio) to some very fine Scarlatti. Squirming under the chair, carrying it, carrying each other, stomping heartily to the music, the bespecatcled Miss Golod (whoever heard of a ballerina wearing glasses?) and the scruffy, blue-jeaned Mr. Mansbach made flagrant nonsense of both the old Master and the art of dance. It was a daring, enjoyable piece, summarizing the evening's offerings with appealing honesty...