Word: nielsen
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...number four and Bill Colson rallied from a 5-3 first-set deficit to dominate Harvard's Harris Masterson at number one, 7-6, 6-3. But Crimson freshman John Ingard whipped Mike Shapiro, 7-6, 6-3, at number five, and co-captain Chris Nielsen dumped Brad Wyche...
Though Shapiro and Rabinovitz took an easy 6-2 first set from Ingard and Nielsen at number two, the Harvard pair rallied to win the next one, 6-4, and with both of the Crimson's other doubles teams leading their first sets, Harvard was still very much alive...
...Ingard and Nielsen couldn't hold together at the last, and the Princeton twosome won the final set, 6-4, giving the Tigers the fifth point they needed for the match. Moments later Masterson and Lindner, playing brilliantly, rallied to take a second set tie-breaker from the feline Colson brothers and broke them in the third to earn a magnificent 6-7, 7-6, 6-3 triumph. Sadly Barnett and Loring had beaten Rampell and Doug Shaeffer at third doubles, 6-3, 7-6, making Harvard's near miss all the more frustrating...
...success at comedy and to his appeal to whites as well as blacks. In their second season on NBC-which, Flip jokes, now really is "the full-color network"-Flip, Geraldine and his other characters have become regular Thursday-night fare for an estimated 40 million Americans. In recent Nielsen ratings, The Flip Wilson Show has been the No. 1 variety entry and the No. 2 show of any kind (after CBS's situation comedy All in the Family). Sponsors' money has followed the audience, and NBC now charges $86,000 for one minute of the show...
...Winter Carnival and then quickly switch to Waikiki for Duke Komanamoko the white water. This Saturday, the Hanover Woods have attracted Chris Schenkel, Bud Wilkinson, and Bill Fleming to the Ivy battle of Ed Marinaro vs. the Big Green. The Ivy title, the Heisman Trophy, and the New York Nielsen rating are at stake...