Word: narrowness
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...season began, but fortunately, for the tournament, both Harvard and B.C. have developed into excellent representatives of the East. And should the two both win or lose and meet on the final night, the promoters have a built-in "grudge" label they can attach, based on the Eagles' narrow 4-3 decision over the Crimson last week. This is an improvement over the tourney's first two years, when Colgate and Army, neither a major hockey power, were sole and weak delegates from the East...
Thomas J. Shields '69, member of the HUC's Committee on Restructuring, said, "The only way to keep the HUC alive is to narrow its goals. HUC success in non-academic affairs will provide a base of respect for the organization...
...victory. Presidential aide John Roche telephoned Sen. Francis X. McCann (D.-Camb.) to say that the White House was "delighted" with the support given to Administration policy. But John Kenneth Galbraith, Paul M. Warburg Professor of Economics, noted that the United States has seldom waged war on such a narrow basis of support...
...asked for. They kept telling me to sharpen the knife more." Like the Review, Coser opposes the war in Viet Nam and considers him self a member in good standing of the left." But in becoming more extremist in its politics," he says, "the Review has taken a very narrow, destructive line...
...visibility, hidden rails in the sides to protect its four passengers (who enter through a single swing-up rear door), cantilevered roof beams that act as skid rails in case of a rollover, and seats that swing in a collision, placing body weight against the seat instead of a narrow seat belt. Mohs, who claims that the sedan is the first big U.S. car built since the Duesenberg was last made in 1937, invited Ford to see its features. To Madison came the curator of the Henry Ford Museum; he was unimpressed...