Word: montreal
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...other NHL quarterfinal action last night, Mike Bossy beat Tony Esposito three minutes into overtime to give the New York Islanders a 1-0 win over Chicago. Montreal defeated Toronto, 5-1, and the New York Rangers evened their series with Philadelphia at one apiece with a 7-1 rout over the Flyers. Both the Islanders and Canadiens hold 2-0 leads in their series...
...other quarterfinal action, Mike Bossy grabbed the hattrick as the New York Islanders trounced Chicago, 6-2. Montreal defeated Toronto, 5-2, and Ken Linseman scored after 44 seconds of overtime to give Philadelphia a 3-2 win over the Rangers...
...Levesque's Parti Quebecois as "a stark, cold reality." Since Trudeau could hardly assert that his stewardship has brought Canadians prosperity and tranquillity, he chose to launch a broadside offensive. He portrayed the country as imperiled by "a growing spirit of egotism and selfishness" and declared in Montreal: "It's impossible to have a united Canada without a strong central government." Dismissing Clark as a "feeble echo" of provincial Premiers who are hungry to expand their powers at Ottawa's expense, Trudeau cast himself as the champion of a government strong enough to defend the national interest...
...Time Schreiber wrote international politics and joked with Managing Editor Henry Grunwald about writing sports some day. The opportunity came in the summer of 1976 when the magazine's chief sportswriter got sick and Time needed someone to cover the Olympics in Montreal. Schreiber wrote three cover-length pieces in as many weeks and her name was passed around in New York's journalism circles. Later that year, she accepted Billie Jean King's offer to edit the now-defunct Women Sports magazine. When the magazine folded. Schreiber went to some of The New York Times's senior editors...
...difficult to choose any team over Montreal to win the Cup, even though the Isles have the home-ice advantage. The best trio of defensemen in hockey (Robinson, Lapointe and Savard), solid goalkeeping from Kenny Dryden, who practices law in his spare time, and the most balanced attack you'll ever see combine to make this squad the force to reckon with in search of Lord Stanley's $48 mug (purchased...