Word: rays
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Lowell forfeited the first bout to give the Crimson an early 6-0 lead, but then Milt Yasunaga's second, freshman Ray Dominquez, battled to a tie at 126 lbs. Bill Mulvihill (134 lbs.) won easily, but then things started to go sour...
Dave Albert118 lbs. 4-1 Jim Kaller 118 lbs 1-2 Milt Yasunaga 126 lbs 3-1-1 Ray Dominquez 126 lbs. 0-1-1 George Letsui 126 lbs. 0-1 Bill Mulvihill 134 lbs. 6-2 Bill Snyder 142 lbs. 0-4 Brian Adler 142 lbs. 0-3 Bob Cusumano 142 lbs. 0-0-1 Tom Bixby 150 lbs. 4-3 Doug Mason 150 lbs. 0-1 Jim Corcoran 158 lbs. 3-4-1 Ed Bordley 167 lbs. 3-5 Sal D'agostino 177 lbs. 8-0 Fred Smith 190 lbs. 2-4-1 John Williams...
Super Bowl. It is the Great American Time Out, a three-hour pause on a Sunday afternoon in January that is?as sheer, unadorned spectacle?an interval unique. For 70 million Americans, life compresses to the diagonally measured size of a cathode ray tube. Work goes undone, play ceases too; telephones stop ringing, crime disappears, romance is delayed and, in all the land, there is just one traffic jam worthy of the title?on highways leading to the Super Bowl site. If it is not literally McLuhan's global village, the Super Bowl certainly is the national town...
...aide to National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle. Granholm begins by cornering 15,000 hotel rooms. Before the game is over, he and the rest of the league staff will have seen to everything from towels and hot dogs to brackets for televisions in the press box to X-ray machines for diagnosing injuries, to coat hangers for clotheshorse athletes to an elaborate security system designed to ensure that nothing can possibly go wrong on Super Sunday...
...circus ringmaster. Now, at age 24, the daughter of Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini is still hung up on rings-only these house a different breed of cat. As a reporter for Italian television, Isabella has just finished interviewing 40 U.S. boxers -including Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier, Sugar Ray Robinson and Joe Louis-for an upcoming six-hour special on the history of the sport. "I used to think boxers were all big muscle but no brain. It isn't true," burbles the ringside reporter. Signorina Rossellini is also a New York correspondent for a weekly Italian news show...