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Entering the third period trailing 3-2, the Crimson notched two quick goals to regain the lead in the contest. Junior Murray Dea tied the score at 3-3, banging a rebound past Dartmouth goalie Jim Jankowski, a freshman from Montreal, at 2:28 of the stanza. Harvard freshman Rick Benson fed the puck to John Cochrane streaking down the right wing. Cochrane nailed a slapper on net which Dea, skillfully trailing the play, flipped into the cage...

Author: By Peter Mcloughlin, | Title: Crimson Drops Heartbreaker | 11/16/1977 | See Source »

...that was it. Yale rebounded later in the quarter with a 54-yard march that culminated in a five-yard run by Rick Angelone for its 10-7 halftime lead, and then the two teams waltzed through the third quarter, waiting for something to happen...

Author: By Michael K. Savit, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: A Blue Finale | 11/14/1977 | See Source »

...Paul Milone, Princeton 7 2 9 Sean O'Donnell, Penn 5 2 7 Walter Diaz, Harvard 3 2 5 Joe Mensah, Yale 3 2 5 Tom Panayoidi, Columbia 2 3 5 Ed Triana, Columbia 1 4 4 Shahin Shayan, Columbia 4 0 4 Mark Schneider, Dartmouth 4 0 4 Rick Derella, Cornell 3 1 4 Lee Nelson, Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crimson Sports Scoreboard | 11/10/1977 | See Source »

...players: Bob Rizzo (QB), John Spagnola (34-catch SE), John Pagliaro (987-yard TB), Rick Angelone (FB), Bill Crowley (LB), Paul Denza and Bob Skoronski (DTs), Kurt Nondorf (CB). LAMBERT TROPHY 1. Colgate (8-0) 66 1/2 pts. 2. Penn State (8-1) 651/2 3. Pitt (7-1-1) 57 5. Yale (6-2) 49 6. Brown (6-2) 37 7. Army (6-3) 28 8. B.C. (5-3) 27 9. Rutgers (6-3) 19 10. Dartmouth (6-2) 15 Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crimson Sports Scoreboard | 11/10/1977 | See Source »

...plain that television, long considered more of a weapon for a President than for his adversaries, is double-edged. Dissent on almost any level ricochets instantly from the far reaches of the nation to the Oval Office. Presidential TV Aide Rick Neustadt says that in the old days a President could make a controversial announcement in the afternoon and know there could be no public answers on television until the next day: to set up cameras and process and edit film took too long to make the evening news. But new technology has made instant response a fact. Carter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY by HUGH SIDEY: What It Takes to Do the Job | 11/7/1977 | See Source »

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