Word: netted
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...longer possible to become a millionaire, that debilitating taxes, savage competition from big corporations and the sating of consumer appetites have slammed the door to great wealth. Wrong on all counts. The U.S. still offers countless opportunities for the man who wants to accumulate a personal net worth of $1,000,000 or more-and thousands seize them every year. The number of U.S. millionaires, reports the Federal Reserve Board, has swelled from 40,000 in 1958 to nearly 100,000 at present. How do they do it? In a variety of individual ways, but their common denominator is that...
Harvard's fullbacks woke up in the second period and Bowditch made several great saves to hold Yale scoreless. But a lackadaisical offense did little more than gaze from afar at the Yale net. Before Harvard decided to start trying to beat Yale to the ball, Kerry had scored once more...
...minutes of concentrated attacking later, the Crimson finally put another one in. Saltonstall lofted the ball over the fullbacks from way out, and Blodget's shot was barely blocked by charging Yale goalie John Skrobat. Njoku caught up with the rebound and eased it into the open net...
Harvard rolled to an early lead as captain Scot Robertson scored early in the first quarter. Robertson again hit the net on an assist from Steve Wimberly a few minutes later to make the first period score 2-0. The lone goal of the second period was made by Brown's Larry Morin...
...Lawyer Charles D. Gill, 27, a salary of $8,000 a year to run his office in a onetime bookie joint next to a pool hall. His clients, mostly Negroes and Puerto Ricans, are carefully screened by 20 Yale law students to determine financial eligibility. The cutoff point: $50 net weekly income per couple, plus $10 per dependent...