Word: patterning
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Brown's Bob Hall has some impressive statistics to his credit. In three Ivy games, he had completed 52 of 87 passes. Despite his aerial proficiency, Brown is winless this year -- and has been having trouble scoring. This pattern will continue today. Colgate has an outstanding defense, and unless Hall gets lucky, Brown won't get on the scoreboard today. Colgate has difficulty moving the ball, too; they tied Cornell, 0-0; beat Holy Cross, 7-3; and beat Yale 7-0 before getting bashed by Princeton last week. However Brown's defense is nothing too spectacular, and they should...
...Americans, but most immediately the poor, the elderly, the undereducated, those who are conspicuously deprived of political representation and economic opportunity. While thus proving itself the most liberal Congress in decades, the 89th has notably refused to act in one area that might have been expected to fit its pattern: it has not approved a single bill that would exclusively benefit organized labor...
...Force V includes the First Team at An Khe, the 101st Airborne's 1st Brigade, and the arriving South Koreans, who will be under American command. The Royal Australian Regiment and the Royal New Zealand Artillery batteries are largely under their own command. Working from the long-established pattern of the advisers' program, U.S. officers confer with their Vietnamese counterparts virtually on a daily basis up and down the line...
Against the rest of the league, the Harvard team hasn't faced any other phantoms but it has faced a lot of fast distance men. The pattern was the same against Northeastern, Brown, and Columbia-Penn, Hardin finished first or second and the next Harvard runner was sixth or seventh. In the Cornell meet, when Hardin overmatched himself, the first Harvard runner in was Captain Wally Liverance, fourth...
...Chaotic Pattern. For weeks to come, critics and commentators would be arguing over the effects of the strike, rehashing its history, reaching for explanations, offering advice for the future. Some enterprising Timesman might even search through the paper's file of unprinted columns left over from the disastrous 114-day New York newspaper strike of 1962-63. There he would find the words of Associate Editor James Reston: "One day the New York newspapers will publish again, but they dare not go back to the same chaotic pattern of collective bargaining that produced the present shutdown. The present system...