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...Rodd Knows Harvard: Brown's Rodd Torbert is now a certified Crimson-killer. The Bruins guard had a career-high 16 points in Brown's blowout on Saturday night, including four three-pointers. Harvard fans may remember the name, because Torbert is also a standout tight end on Brown football Coach Mickey Kwiatkowski's soda-can brigade, and was named to the first-team All-Ivy squad. In Brown's 52-37 demolition of the Crimson at the Stadium on November 3, Torbert had 156 yards on 11 receptions...

Author: By Josie Karp, | Title: It's A Princeton 'Three-Peat' | 2/26/1991 | See Source »

...Wild Week: How weird was last weekend? Neither Lenkaitis nor Bruins split end Rodd Torbert--who also entered the Brown record books with 156 yards receiving, 11 receptions in the game and 62 receptions in a season--received Ivy League Offensive Player of the Week honors. Not even close...

Author: By Michael R. Grunwald, | Title: You Wouldn't Have Expected This in Your Wildest Dreams | 11/6/1990 | See Source »

...season's first seven games, the ultraconservative Harvard air attack has produced only 50 pass receptions--one fewer than Brown split end Rodd Torbert's total. Harvard QB Adam Lazarre-White has not thrown for 100 yards in a game since Harvard's 35-14 loss to Holy Cross on September...

Author: By Josie Karp, | Title: Gridders Put Ivy Hopes on the Line | 11/3/1990 | See Source »

Clark threw two touchdown passes in the second quarter to give Brown a 21-7 halftime lead. On the first one, he rolled right and threw back across the field to Bill Miller, who ran 16 yards to score. The second strike was to Rodd Torbert for 10 yards...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Streak Ends: Bruins Shock Big Red | 10/23/1989 | See Source »

...This was the most buoyant furniture sale I've had in 20 years," says Christopher Hawkins, Phillips' managing director. "This has been my busiest month ever," says Rodd McLennan, an antiques dealer in Chelsea. "Mostly because Americans were buying furniture, always furniture: Regency, Biedermeier and English country house." Despite the price hikes, bargains can be found. One American woman talks gleefully of finding some Victorian pressed glass for almost nothing. "We are in pig heaven," she says. "This is play money buying treasures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: The Traveling Dollar | 4/22/1985 | See Source »

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