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After Piatelli's decisive goal, the freshman almost tied it up on a two-on-one charge on the New Hampton net, but Huskie goaltender Rich L'Heureux kicked out the puck to Doug Jones who padded the lead for the visitors...

Author: By Carl A. Esterhay, | Title: Hungry Huskies Feed on Yardlings, 7-4 | 2/24/1977 | See Source »

...people and pronouns in English the masculine is the unmarked and hence is used as a neutral or unspecified term. This reflects the ancient pattern of the Indo-European languages, seen also, for example, in French: hommes et femmes heureux "happy men and women" (with the masculine form of the adjective). Thus we say: All men are created equal. Each student shall discuss his paper topic with his section man. Madam Chairman, I object...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRONOUN ENVY | 11/16/1971 | See Source »

...Blues were hurting; starting center, Paul Laurent, was sidelined as was regular defenseman Bill L' Heureux, goaltender Rick Johston and five others. But Toronto had plenty of size and skating ability, and impressive depth. It was quite possibly the most talented squad the Crimson has faced this season, and playing by Canadian rules, one of the most brutal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Skaters Win Three Games; DeMichele, Mark Injured | 1/5/1970 | See Source »

...poems, slipped in to compliment the critical articles, are partly responsible for Bogus' high quality. "California Plush" by graduate student Frank Bidart just misses being one of those six-page identity crisis -California -Cambridge poems; but Bidart's sincere, practically apologetic awkwardness saves it from banality. John L'Heureux seems a more accomplished poet. His "Three Awful Picnics" manipulates a playfully surreal death (of a man whose "head split open like a rotten cantaloupe and seven birds flew out") through three discordant, animated perspectives...

Author: By Jack Davis, | Title: 'Bogus' | 5/24/1968 | See Source »

...review an entirely different cast. Subsequent issues may stake out a particular part of the vaguely defined "literary criticism" terrain for Bogus' concentration. It could emphasize outstanding undergraduate essays in literary history (like Egan's and DeYoung's); print more prestigious "professional" work (like that of Gelpi and L'Heureux); or review contemporary literary concerns, as Lubin's parody does. Any of these categories could define a separate review. To expect one journal to handle all adequately is, perhaps, too much to ask. Bogus is valuable even though the "long-standing need" is for more than a single semi-annual...

Author: By Jack Davis, | Title: 'Bogus' | 5/24/1968 | See Source »

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