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...change paid off, as leading scorer Bill Hozack, the recipient of great passes from Hughes and Schuster, broke in alone on the power play and Bruin goalie Mike Laycock. A fake here, a deke there and it was 1-1 after...

Author: By Michael K. Savit, | Title: Skaters Come Out of Reading Period Sleep, Send Bruins Back In, 4-3, On Late Garrity Goal | 1/10/1977 | See Source »

Harvard continued to dominate, proving that it had indeed learned something in Wisconsin, and when George Hughes knocked his own rebound past Laycock from what seemed an impossible angle, the Crimson had the lead...

Author: By Michael K. Savit, | Title: Skaters Come Out of Reading Period Sleep, Send Bruins Back In, 4-3, On Late Garrity Goal | 1/10/1977 | See Source »

...occasion was Hughes's second tally for a 3-2 advantage, this one coming on assists from Kevin O'Donoghue and Mike Clasby, who was substituting for an injured Gene Purdy. Hughes's shot from in close was partially deflected by Laycock, but the elusive little puck hopped over the latter's shoulder and landed behind the goal stripe...

Author: By Michael K. Savit, | Title: Skaters Come Out of Reading Period Sleep, Send Bruins Back In, 4-3, On Late Garrity Goal | 1/10/1977 | See Source »

Died. Major General Sir Robert Laycock, 60, debonair, dashing leader of England's World War II commandos; of a heart attack; in Wiseton, England. The storybook image of a daring British commando, the tall, blue-eyed Laycock led his raiders through Crete, Syria, Sicily and Salerno, executed his boldest raid in 1941, when he landed on the Libyan coast, tried to kidnap Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, lost 48 of his 50-man party, and escaped across the desert, living for six weeks on little else but berries and rain water...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Mar. 22, 1968 | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

...recently by a British surgeon. The average Chinese diet was always so low in protein (nitrogen compounds in meat, fish, some vegetables) that the slightest disruption in supply might produce famine. The disruption brought about by the war has"'been enormous. In south Kwangtung last year, H. T. Laycock, a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, doctored hundreds of Chinese who had been getting no protein at all. Wrote he to the British Medical Journal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Bodies Need Food | 8/7/1944 | See Source »

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