Word: jim
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...tight match all around. Harvard's Bob Kidder and Jim Torhorst stood the 13th tee knowing that if they won, Crimson would beat both teams. Williams led in one match, 3-2, and B.C. by same score in the other...
...very next inning, the Eagles got to McCandlish, who had not given up a hit until the fifth. Ed O'Neil bunted safely and took second as Jim Tobin threw the ball away. Tom Anderson's infield single put men on first and second, and Mick Amick sacrificed them to second and third. Fred Prifty's single scored O'Neil, but Anderson tripped and went sprawling as he rounded third. After a brief hassle, the umpire ruled interference and Anderson got a free ride to score...
Brian McGuinn, Harvard's top player, whipped his Williams foe, but lost to B.C.'s powerful Jim Kohoe, tow down on the 18th...
...demographic studies are available now to show exactly who these discerning listeners might be and just how many of them there are but President Jim Hill '67 is at no loss to predict his listenership. WHRB, he says, he reaches the "academic underground of Boston," Largely on its FM frequency. It goes to college students, professors, and "other academic professional people with well-educated backgrounds." The station doesn't even try, or want to try, to infringe on the listenership of WBZ, or WMEX. Its FM advertising, for example, is almost entirely for publications such as The National Observer...
Part of his opposition seems to be a built-in defense mechanism. Jim Hill saw the proposed orgy as a "foot-in-the-door" threat, and feared future administrations would weaken farther until rock was at WHRB to stay. "College stations with a high percentage of rock-tend to be very amateurish," he say with distaste. Amateurish is nothing WHRB wants to be. "I like it [rock]," he says, "but rock on FM would be a travesty. It would bring us new personalities and new talent--if we could fit it in with our image...