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Having had the experience of playing "big-time basketball" at Harvard and under coach Bob Harrison from 1968 until February 1971, I can positively and unemotionally call it the poorest experience I have had in my entire life. To call it a meaningful experience would be a blatant lie. To say that it is a constructive program would be a gross misinterpretation of the facts. Your program, as it now stands, is corrosive not only to the acquisition of added basketball skill, but to character as well. I have neither seen, nor heard of, any one person since 1968 that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: To the Sports Editor: | 3/10/1973 | See Source »

Against a 5-11 Columbia squad Saturday night in New York City, the cagers played one of their poorest games of the season. Neither the Crimson nor the Lions were able to find the basket with any frequency during the contest...

Author: By Douglas E. Schoen, | Title: Cagers Win Two Weekend Contests, Defeat Cornell, Columbia on Road | 2/5/1973 | See Source »

...gave the two poorest teams in the league two first round draft picks. What were the teams and which players did they pick...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The New and Better Exam Period Sports Quiz | 1/29/1973 | See Source »

Roughly speaking, the reporting and first-draft writing is done by the candidates, who number from about forty, when a batch begins to try, to seven or eight when the most successful are elected editors. But as the poorest of them drop out or are dropped, the better ones are given more and more suggestions and assignments. If a candidate shows interest and industry, if he is accurate and reliable in writing up his news, and if he has any interest, intellectual, social, or athletic, which brings him into contact with some of the sources of College activity...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Budding Journalists Become Athletes As Well | 1/24/1973 | See Source »

...designate specific areas where the government offers supplementary city services. Because of the large amount of attention generated by the civil rights movement. Congress felt it had to appease black and other minority groups. Thus the areas selected for federal programs have almost always included only the poorest ghetto areas, leaving the lower middle class whites to fend for themselves...

Author: By Douglas E. Schoen, | Title: Law and Order | 1/12/1973 | See Source »

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