Word: dependencies
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City officials recently invited the University to take part in a "discussion of where Cambridge is going and how it could be improved," and Harvard has accepted, Wyatt said. "We have to protect our interests and not depend on random developments to come up with what is best for the Square," he added...
...quarterback John Rogan and a crop of talented receivers are back, promising to make Cozza's multiple-I formation a potent threat. Rogan will be looking for favorite receiver Curtis Grieve; that combination, as Harvard fans will painfully remember, buried the Crimson last November. All these potential offensive fireworks depend on Cozza's success in rebuilding his offensive line, decimated by graduation. That, he cautions, takes time, especially since the task includes replacing a pair of All-Ivy tackle selections, with players who didn't start but did see a lot of action anyway last year...
Penn's fortunes depend on whatever firepower Bob Seddon can manage to squeeze out of a short line of returnees and a gaggle of talented but untried freshmen. Prominent among the latter group is Keith Omsburg, who scored 45 goals his last high school season. Striker Bruce Becker is another possible key, with Kevin Kinnevy the leading returning scorer. Graduate Petrowski and Eric Omsberg--last year's leading scorers--were pressure players par excellence, scoring most of their goals in the last five or ten minutes of a game so the Quakers will need to find a comparable pair...
...teams will share the common Ivy malady of failure to score. Dartmouth returns 17 lettermen, including second-team All-Ivy goalie Andy Krahling, who last fall recorded six shutouts and was spectacular as the Big Green upset Harvard, 2-1, in the New Hampshire rain. Coach Tom Griffith will depend heavily on other returning defensive and midfield standouts, including second-team All-Ivy fullback Tim May and halfback co-captains Steve D'Antonio and Chris Morrisson...
...crew is wary of modern navigational instruments, preferring to depend on triangles, protractors and geometry lessons of old. The hydraulic steering mechanism, for example, allows Cavalier to be guided by automatic pilot, but no one trusts it for work hi shallow waters. Says Seaman Aaron Hairston, 33: "If you had an accident while you were on autopilot, you'd never be able to look at the water in your bathtub again." To the crew, the white-boxed computer, which winks out positions and readings from information beamed by a satellite, is a dunce. More often than not compass beats...