Word: walls
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Dartmouth's only score came late in the final quarter as substitute quarterback Bill Koenig hit Randy Wallick for an 11 yard TD pass. By that time, even the Harvard fans cheered.Harvard's massive defensive tackles, RICK BERNE (71) and LON KAPLAN (77), storm through the Dartmouth forward wall to smother substitute quarterback BILL KOENIG (14). Berne and Kaplan shared in the Harvard defense's complete containment of the Big Green last Saturday; Dartmouth was held to 75 yards on the ground and 119 in the air while Harvard walked off with a 22-7 victory...
...recent weeks things have improved. Wall Street Financiers John Loeb and Sidney Weinberg have done some strenuous pleading that has begun to pay off. Humphrey is even going after the loose change. Last week he paid a post-midnight visit to a Manhattan discotheque called Nepantha, where the younger, swingier set had paid $50 a head for the Humphrey cause. As he stood in the psychedelic lights, someone yelled: "You're beautiful, baby!" The event netted...
...latest step in that direction is a proposed merger with New York-based St. Regis Paper Co., a deal that has already brought RCA plenty of static from Wall Street analysts. The get-together, involving $630 million in RCA stock, was negotiated by Bob Sarnoff and St. Regis' longtime chairman, Roy K. Ferguson, 74, but still must be approved by directors and shareholders of both companies. If it goes through, the acquisition of the $721.7 million-a-year paper company would put RCA, the 27th largest U.S. firm, as recently as four years ago, within striking distance...
More Positives. Wall Street has denied Sarnoff high marks for the St. Regis deal for the simple reason that the paper company has not been growing as fast as RCA has. A stodgily managed firm in a cyclical industry, St. Regis earned $30.3 million last year, a 22% decline from the year before, but has managed to improve profits slightly so far in 1968. Although RCA stock dropped sharply following the merger announcement, Sarnoff insisted that "it's an excellent deal. The positives far outnumber the negatives...
...Gallery showroom is stuffed with pictures. Shoulder to shoulder, frame to frame, they overwhelm the viewer as he enters. Yet there is no ex-Cliffie receptionist to threaten you at the door, no sickening plunge into wall-to-wall restraint and exclusiveness like one finds in New York's big galleries. The drawers and drawers of prints are open to anyone. You may shudder at shuffling and bending beautiful Goyas as you look through the stacks of prints. But at least you can see them for yourself with no hassle, look, touch, browse as long as you want...