Word: per
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Harvard running back Tony Hinz grabbed the spotlight last week with his electrifying 73-yard run and his 152-yard rushing day. But Hinz's backmate Dave Bunning also scored twice last week and has averaged five yards per carry. Hinz's 5.6 average leads all Harvard rushers, who have accumulated 711 total yards in five games. The running game came back to life against Dartmouth, giving Harvard a strong offensive weapon to complement Yohe's aerial attack...
...Tigers like to run. In five games, Princeton has run for 1005 total yards. Judd Garrett, the Ivy's leading rusher with 362 yards, has averaged 5.6 yards per carry and has scored six times. Backmates Jerry Santillo and Kris Keys have both run well also. The highlight of Princeton's running game thus far was Keys' 88-yard scamper against Davidson...
Judd Garrett leads all Tiger receivers with 23 catches while brother John is close behind with 19. Split end Jeff Baker is tops on the team with an 18.7 yards-per-catch average. Like Harvard, Princeton likes to pass to everyone on the field. Last week against Lehigh, Judd caught eight passes down the stretch as the Tigers rallied to win by a point...
...report delineates three cholesterol ranges (all measured in milligrams per deciliter of blood). Levels below 200 mg/dl are considered desirable, although people in this range are still urged to have their cholesterol rechecked every five years. Those with readings from 200 to 239 mg/dl are viewed as borderline cases and advised to watch their diet and be retested annually. Individuals with levels of 240 mg/dl or more are at high risk and require medical attention, including a second test to determine the ratio of "good" cholesterol (high-density lipoprotein, or HDL) to "bad" cholesterol (low-density lipoprotein, or LDL). People...
...atmospheric CO2 would eventually lead to a 9 degrees F warming of the globe. Conversely, he suggested, glacial periods might be caused by diminished levels of the gas. His contemporaries scoffed. Arrhenius, however, was exactly right. In his time, the CO2 concentration was about 280 to 290 parts per million -- just right for a moderately warm, interglacial period. But today the count stands at some 340 p.p.m. By 2050, if the present rate of burning fossil fuels continues, that concentration will double, trapping progressively more infrared radiation in the atmosphere...