Word: nelsons
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...show's curator, Ralph T. Coe of Kansas City's Nelson Gallery of Art, is not an anthropologist but an art historian who uncovered the 850 artifacts in obscure collections from South Dakota to south Bavaria. The exhibit, which has been praised by London's art critics, is loosely organized by geography, with scholarly gloss held to a welcome minimum. Prehistoric stone carvings from the southeastern forests immortalize a puma or a hawk in onyx and a snake in a slithering s of shiny mica. The ochers and sharp abstractions of the Southwest desert dominate the region...
Harvard opened the scoring at 18:45 on a clockwork goal which was met with shouts of "It's about time," from the Crimson bench. Lee Nelson took the ball from midfield and traded passes with Dave Acorn leaving him one-on-one with Dartmouth goalie Lyman Missimer...
...week of misadventures and buffeting left his campaign aides confused and rattled; at times late in the week, the President looked particularly grim. Said a campaign official: "We recognize that something has to be done, and fast, but what that something is, nobody seems to know." Vice President Nelson Rockefeller was being primed to lead a counterattack against Carter this week in hopes of putting the Democrat again on the defensive. The G.O.P. plan is for Rocky to hammer away at Carter's finances, raising questions about his campaign contributors and the tax records of his family-held peanut farm...
...University of California at Davis: "He was terribly evasive, terribly moralistic in vague, evangelical terms. His strategy was to go on the offensive against the President, rather than to discuss his own program or to show the real flaws in Ford's approach." Added Berkeley Political Scientist Nelson Polsby of Carter: "When faced with a problem, he offers you a nostrum, waves it over the diseased limb and then goes away." But Carter had his defenders among the professionals. Said Harvard Government Professor Samuel Huntington: "Carter did show spark and spontaneity, and he did a good job stating...
Eaton fed the ball to Acorn, but his head-in attempt went wide. Moments later, Eaton again drove the ball toward the UMass goal. The pass was taken by Lee Nelson, who was tripped in the penalty area. Eric Zager converted on the penalty kick, and Harvard had the game safely in hand...