Word: quarterly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Penn controlled the game throughout the first quarter. Harvard's halfback line sagged deep into the Crimson penalty area, and the Quakers easily kept the ball in their offensive half of the field. But goalie Meyers and a stalwart defense maintained a scoreless...
...been little more than a disaster. The Quakers had 20 Lettermen returning from last fall's squad that lost only to Harvard and Yale, and they opened the season with fairly easy triumphs over Bucknell and Brown. Then they played Dartmouth Penn's offense depends on its quarter-back-and the Red and Blue had lost both Berne Zbrzeznj and Mike Hickok with shoulder separations in the Brown game...
...Penn squad has beaten Harvard, but until 1967, the Crimson had poor luck at Philadelphia. Two years ago it shattered Penn, 45-7. to break the Franklin Field jinx. Last year, in a "battle of the undefeateds," it tore the Quakers apart, scoring 21 points in the opening quarter and rolling to an easy 28-6 victory. A triumph today would provide needed reassurance that the Cornell and Dartmouth debacles were unrepresentative of Harvard's talent...
...which he perhaps picked up from his boss: professional football. Kissinger analyzes the play as if it were a parable of war and peace. Watching a Miami Dolphins-Oakland Raiders game with White House Aide William Safire, Kissinger second-guessed the signals accurately until the middle of the second quarter, when Miami had the ball. "What now?" asked Safire. Kissinger observed that Miami Quarterback Bob Griese had not yet passed on first down, and might try it this time to catch Oakland off balance. Sure enough, Griese passed on first down-and was intercepted for an Oakland touchdown. "There...
...problem of devising alternative frameworks for development policy goes much deeper than avoiding political influence from one quarter or another. It is an intellectual challenge that can be met by bringing together a variety of practical and theoretical talents and experience. The Center for International Affairs would be losing a unique opportunity to do this if it refrained from involvement in practical affairs for fear of becoming tainted. While the radical critics have warned us of the dangers involved. my answer is that we don't have to be so inept as to let it work out that...