Word: seeds
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...second heat, Radcliffe easily handled number five seed Williams, winning by slightly over one length, as the top crews in each heat advanced to the finals...
...varsity has the first-seed honors despite its man-overboard loss to Navy. But the traditionally cautious Higginson seems confident with his crews' prospects. "We're pretty well prepared and the Princeton course is slightly more fair than Worcester," he said...
...finals of the doubles was all Princeton with the number one team of Louise Gengler and Mo Curran emerging victorious. The finals of the singles competition, though, was all Yale as the top-seeded Yalie Lisa Rosenblum defeated the second seed for the Elis, Sue Graham. To reach the finals. Graham had to beat the highly regarded number one for Princeton, Linda Rice...
Tournament rules allowed each school to bring two singles players and two doubles teams. Radcliffe brought only one singles player. Ingrid Sarapuu, who by the luck of the draw played Princeton's number four seed. Julic Kirkham, in the opening round. Sarapuu lost the first set 6-0 to Kirkham before coming back to take the first gwo games of the second set. Sarapuu then lost six straight games to lose the set, 6-2. The other Radcliffe doubles team made up of Maud Wood and Ann Koufman lost in the quarterfinals of the doubles competition...
...sauce all winter. A 15-ft. row of tomato plants can produce up to 100 Ibs. per season at a saving, says Fell, of at least $33. Squash, beans, peas and lettuce will also reward the diligent gardener with bountiful crops. This year, for the fashionable or the finicky, seed-growers are even offering blue potatoes, yellow melons, purple beans and yellow beets...