Word: hardest
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Hardest Shooter...
Harvard jumped out to a 4-1 lead at the end of the first period on two scores by Cavanagh, one by Barker, and one off the stick of left defenseman David Jones. Jones, described by Coach Gene Kinasewich as probably the "hardest shooter at Harvard, including the varsity," took advantage of a bad clear by his Dartmouth counterpart to drill a wrist shot from the blue line over the Hanover goalie's shoulder...
...BANK LOANS. In hopes of achieving a $500 million contraction in last year's $9 billion of bank loans to foreigners, President Johnson ordered a tightening of still voluntary controls administered by the Federal Reserve Board. As with investment controls, the new rules will hit Europe hardest. The Reserve Board asked banks to refuse to renew outstanding loans on the Continent when they mature and to reduce their short-term (less than a year) loans in the region by 40% during 1968. Just to make sure banks cooperate, the President also gave the Fed stand-by power to make...
...have hit his target in two out of three rapid-fire shots," argues Sparrow, it is more difficult yet "to believe that two men more than 100 yards apart and unable to see or communicate with each other, could have synchronized their fire so perfectly. And it is hardest of all to imagine that conspirators would have allowed the success of their plan to depend on such a feat of synchronization...
...sizable substratum of society, it is a season for light-fingered taking. In the four weeks before Christmas, department stores suffer half their annual losses from shoplifting. Much of it is impulse stealing-the easiest to spot, because it is often done so clumsily, but the hardest to predict, because no segment of the population is immune. Only last week the Harvard Cooperative Society announced that it had caught 18 undergraduates shoplifting. Said Harvard Coop Manager John G. Morrill: "Everybody has the propensity to steal, and Harvard has its share of crooks...