Word: changed
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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Privately, gentle Premier John M. Chang, himself a longtime Rhee foe, deplored the students' troublemaking. But publicly he temporized, offered to consult with them regularly to get their ideas of what course South Korea should take...
Between mob politics and petty parliamentary factionalism-a dissident wing of Chang's own Democratic Party recently broke off to form a new party-South Korea was still a long way from re-establishing stable government. But along with Chang's new toughness, there was another hopeful straw in the wind. During the April riots against Rhee, thousands of cheering Seoul adults egged the students on. Last week, with rare exceptions, their elders watched the rampaging students in disapproving silence...
...final minutes, Crimson coach Bruce Munro emptied the bench. Items of interest were a miss from point-blank range by center forward Al Chang and inside Chris Martin's nearly implemented plan to take on the entire Terrier eleven...
...After changing sides at the 22-minute mark, Monro's team evened the game at 5:35. The tying goal came on the same play that scored the second. Wendell took possession of the ball at the spot where he set up Chang's clincher. The Crimson junior faked out two Penn defenders, as he did later, and kept driving in on the far left. He let go a high shot for which Burg leaped, but the ball caught in the nets...
...encounter was the varsity's dogged ability to hold Penn scoreless in the third period when the Crimson faced the wind. Then, in the all-important final quarter, the Quakers were troubled by the wind. The Crimson waited for an opportunity, and it came at 19:52 with Chang's shot in close...