Word: kevin
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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While there were only seven seniors on the Crimson's 1976 squad, they made a great contribution. Gone are attackman Billy Tennis, who scored 63 points to lead the team last year, midfielder Kevin McCall (29-5-34), who garnered a spot on the second All-Ivy team and shared the team's Most Valuable Player award with Tennis, and second team All-Ivy defenseman Mike Belmont. Three regular midfielders--Bruce Bruckman, Andy Gellis, and Giles Whalen--also picked up diplomas last June...
...Thursday, the Crimson swam Malcolm Cooper in the 50 yard free-style, Kevin O'Connell, the only Harvard swimmer who made this tournament last year in the 200-yard individual medley and the seventh-ranked medley-relay team of Tom Wolf, Ted Fullerton, George Keim and Cooper...
...float with signs declaring: "Hicks says South Boston is MY Roots," and "Southie is worth fighting for." Her group, ironically identifying itself as South Boston's Marshall's Youth Activities, was followed by a sound truck blurting the locally popular tune "Southie, My Home Town." Boston Mayor Kevin White did not march, but Gov. Michael Dukakis did, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy '54 never showed despite his announced intention to participate. He is probably lucky he stayed away--bars, shop windows and lapels bore little good will for the man whose family name is uttered with reverence by most Irish...
Southie's only representative was Kevin Dorian, who entered the ring wearing a robe with "Sinn Fein, South Boston," emblazoned on the back. But Dorian's "fighting Irish" background did not surface during the fight...
...busing of children between the city's most antagonistic neighborhoods (Irish Catholic South Boston and black Roxbury). It was resisted by every defiant or foot-dragging means possible by a Boston School Committee that exploited the town's inherent bigotry and fear. Lupo contends that Mayor Kevin White, a progressive but hard-nosed political pro, saved Boston from chaos in 1974 by pleading, cajoling and threatening the city's many factions-including its antibusing police-through wearying hours of public meetings, private coffee klatches, telephone calls and stormy sessions with top aides. White even assailed President Gerald...