Word: patly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Crimson put the ball in the air more times than any team in Harvard history, last year. With a promising new split end on the receiving side, sophomore Pat McInally, the Crimson may well outdo themselves this season. Restic effusively praised McInally, who may duplicate his record breaking year on the freshman team (eleven TD's an average of over 24 yards per catch), if his six foot six inch, 160 lb frame is not broken in half by a defensive back...
Holt's favorite target on the freshman team last year. Pat McInally, was once again on the receiving end-of most of the Hawaiian native's bullet passes McInally, who has height, great hands and at least against bad defensive back terrific moves, left the hapless Brown secondary in the dirt with six catches for 114 yards and two touch downs...
...Davis playfully hugged Nixon at a youth rally, they snapped each other's photos, and Nixon noted that the support of a star like Sammy could not be bought with a dinner at the White House. Also acting it up for the President were John Wayne, James Stewart, Pat Boone and Charlton Heston. Although an incumbent President can readily command a surface loyalty, it was no small achievement for Nixon to hear himself praised from the rostrum in strikingly similar terms by Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller, Ronald Reagan and Ed Brooke. The smiling faces of such onetime villains...
However carefully coached, the youths responded with an enthusiasm that seemed contagious. Their shouts of "We want Pat" kept a pleased Pat Nixon from acknowledging an overblown James Stewart-narrated tribute for twelve minutes. They repeatedly interrupted Barry Goldwater and waved such age-bridging signs as RON BABY, WE LOVE YOU at Ronald Reagan. They released even more of their lung power every time their unlikely hero, Richard Nixon, appeared in public. "Nixon now, more than ever! Nixon now, more than ever!" went...
...seat next to Pat Nixon at a gala fund-raising dinner in Miami Beach for Republicans was assigned to Kenneth H. Dahlberg, Midwest finance chairman of the Committee for the Re-Election of the President. Graciously, he turned his chair over to Dwayne O. Andreas, a Minneapolis millionaire who earlier this year donated $75,000 to Hubert Humphrey's unsuccessful presidential primary campaign. Since then Andreas had given $25,000 to the Nixon committee-and that, Dahlberg thought, made him a man who ought to sit next to the First Lady. But by week's end both Dahlberg...