Word: kept
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...fine diving save by Harvard goalie Weinfurtner kept the score at 1-0 and enabled Harvard to tie the game five minutes later Gerard Hall tallied the goal, trapping a fine chip from Mark Battey with his chest before dribbling around a prematurely sprawled Dartmouth goalie Alex Dmyterko...
HENRY A. KISSINGER '50 came to town last weekend in his limousine and on his own terms. The Nieman Foundation honored Kissiner by making him the main attraction of its triennial convocation. It kept Kissinger's visit secret, almost completely sparing him from any public confrontation with his critics. Kissinger requested, and received, assurances that his appearance would be strictly off the record...
...unnecessarily restrictive. After leaving the Communist Party, Fast found a new school of thought with which to align himself: for the past 20 years he has practiced Zen Buddhism. He explains his attraction to Zen quite simply. Last week, looking slightly out of place but relaxed at a carefully-kept conference room at the Boston offices of his publisher, Houghton Mifflin, Fast said, "You get to a point where you've seen a couple of wars, prison, and all the rest that brings with it, and you have to determine for yourself whether the whole thing adds up to anything...
...stands as Roger Daltrey's parody (if not attack) on British punk rock. For those of us who know Daltrey, it is a familiar rag, only because it parleys Daltrey's working class consciousness. Daltrey once told a reporter he was happiest to be a rock musician because "it kept him out of the factories." Daltrey's self-styled punk star of the song "is a face in the mirror that may give you a fright," a narcissistic star who graces the cover of the album, "but he's alright," the song reassures...
Arthur Armstrong In 1969 Irish Artist Armstrong ended a losing seven-year struggle with the Dublin tax authorities; it seems that he kept artistically inaccurate records of his brush-and-easel expenses. Now spared the drudgery of bookkeeping, Bachelor Armstrong, 53, ambles through an unhurried life of painting ("There is a limit to the amount you can produce to satisfy yourself) and making the rounds in Dublin. "You can get to know everybody here," says he. "In London, there's too much territory to cover...