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...machine gave Mike the ball first, and he moved it on me right away. After a quick first down around end, he had quarterback Chris Metz hit flanker Mark Brown on a bomb to move the ball inside the Harvard ten. Derrick Harmon pushed it over for a 6-0 Cornell lead...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Give Them No Quarter | 10/10/1981 | See Source »

Metz will probably call Derek Harmon's number when he wants to move the ball outside. The sophomore rushed for 152 yards against Penn, and his three-game total is 246 on 57 carries...

Author: By Bruce Schoenfeld, | Title: Gridders Travel to Ithaca | 10/9/1981 | See Source »

...play begins with a suicide and ends with a duel. There is plenty of cynical merriment in between. At the center of the drama is an elegant couple, Friedrich Hofreiter (Keith Baxter) and his wife Genia (Jennifer Harmon). He is a light bulb manufacturer with a roving eye, and she practices blind decorum as high diplomacy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: La Valse | 3/9/1981 | See Source »

...Flamingo Road, as with most nighttime soaps, is simplicity itself. Lane Ballou (Cristina Raines), a good girl from the bad side of nowhere, comes to Truro, a small Florida town. There she attracts the attentions of both Sam Curtis (John Beck), a tomcatting entrepreneur, and Fielding Carlyle (Mark Harmon), a political comer who weds Constance Wei-don (Morgan Fairchild), the snooty illegitimate daughter of Whorehouse Madam Lute-Mae Sanders (Stella Stevens) and Millowner Claude Weldon (Kevin Mc Carthy), who is married to the patrician Eudora Weldon (Barbara Rush), whose affair with the town's newspaper editor, Elmo Tyson (Mason...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Season of the Nightsoaps | 2/9/1981 | See Source »

...askew; randy women jackknifing their long bare legs around any man who will come near a canopied bed; meta-trash dialogue like "You're trouble, girl, nothin' but trouble." At the moment, a crushing share of the dramatic burden falls on the strong, hairy shoulders of Mark Harmon. His character, who is both rising-star politician and star-crossed lover, as yet shows no consuming letch for power. He is too much Bobby Ewing, not enough J.R. But an axiom of prime-time soaps is that as the show gets on and the evil folks take over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Season of the Nightsoaps | 2/9/1981 | See Source »

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