Word: tate
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UConn managed its only score at 12:16 of the first when Lisa Diamadio slipped the puck past the outstretched stick of Crimson goalie Cherryl Tate...
...Dartmouth's Estey Ticknor intercepted a Crimson pass, skated from her own blue line, and deposited the puck into the back of the Crimson goal at 16:35 of the second period. The goal proved to be the only one the Big Green could manage off Harvard goalic Cheryl Tate, who finished the game with 18 saves...
...became a fanatical reader, of Job, of Shakespeare and then of any poetry he could find. He also began to exhibit signs of manic depression. Both aspects showed in his pursuit of a poetic career; in 1937 he journeyed to Vanderbilt University outside Nashville to visit his idol, Allen Tate. He pitched a tent on the poet's lawn for three months...
...TIME. All, except for the cover portrait of Attica Inmate Richard Eder, were black-and-white shots. Says Leifer: "Prison is a very, very boring existence for convicts. We sought an honest look." One of his most vivid portraits is of Charles Manson, convicted of the Tate-LaBianca murders of 1969, who was photographed for the first time in his cell. At the start, Manson, whose drug-using, commune-organizing, desert-dwelling '60s life-style once made him America's most prominent disturbed person, was leery and unwilling. But during a second visit with Manson, Leifer managed...
...with gossip because she so openly scorned the role of faculty wife. When her husband told her that he had invited T.S. Eliot to dinner, she said, "Tell him to bring his own chop." During an erratic ride to a local restaurant, Edmund Wilson criticized the driving of Allen Tate: "Thank you uh uh, thank you Allen for uh for uh for an interesting and hazardous experiment in uh what it's like to drive on the wrong side of the road, an experiment hohoho which I uh I want never to repeat...