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BULKY DOCUMENTS
`
`(exceeds 300 pages)
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`Proceedingl Serial No: 9 1 17 179 1
`
`Filed: 04-30-2007
`
`Title: Opposer’s Notice of Reliance
`
`Part 5 of 6
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`New England Prep School All-Tournament team. His father, Bobby, is an assistant coach with
`the New England Patriots.
`
`Here and there .
`
`.
`
`.
`
`Carolyn Harrington, a member of the Boston University Athletic Hall of Fame, has retired as
`girls softball coach at Newton North High School after 16 seasons. She will be replaced by
`Richard Fletcher, who has coached football, baseball and hockey at North and is a member of
`the physical education department. .
`.
`. Tom Ruzzo of Medfield, a freshman forward on the
`Dartmouth College hockey team, scored two goals in helping the Big Green to a 7-2 romp
`over Ivy League rival Yale. He also notched the game-winner in an early-season victory
`over Vermont. .
`.
`. Jennifer Gorak of Westborough has been a-solid performer for the Lehigh
`University women's basketball squad, averaging 6.3 points and 4.7 rebounds per game as a
`starting forward. Gorak, agraduate of Westborough High and a senior at Lehigh, had also
`chippedin with 27 assists, 19 steals and three blocked shots in 12 games. .
`.
`. Jason Teabo g
`of Waltham and Julieanna Sachetti of Wellesley, who competed at the US National Figure
`Skating Championships in Detroit, will be performing at the Bay State Skate, an exhibition of
`the Bay State Games, at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 12 at Williams College's Lansing Chapman Rink. .
`.
`.
`In last Saturday's 97-92 triple overtime loss to Trinity, Tufts basketball standout Khari Brown
`of Newton had 20 pointsand 24 rebounds, with the latter just two shy of the team record set
`by Reggie Graham in 1972.
`
`GRAPHIC: PHOTO
`
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`The Boston Globe, January 30, 1994
`
`Copyright 1994 Globe Newspaper Company
`The Boston Globe
`
`January 30, 1994, Sunday, City Edition
`SECTION: NEW HAMPSHIRE WEEKLY; Pg. 16
`A
`
`LENGTH: 1094 words
`
`HEADLINE: 3 Granite State sports figures head elsewhere;
`NEW HAMPSHIRE WEEKLY / SPORTS / AT LARGE / ALLEN LESSELS
`
`BYLINE: By Allen Lessels, Globe Staff
`
`BODY:
`Question: What do Tom Elliman, Bobby Clark and Ron Hoffman have in common?
`Answer: All are heading off across the country or world on new challenges in the weeks and
`months ahead.
`While Elliman, general manager at New Hampshire International Speedway since it opened,
`and Clark, Dartmouth College men's soccer coach the last nine seasons, got offers they
`couldn't refuse and are embarking on new careers, Hoffman is headed for Alaska and his
`next endurance test.
`Elliman leaves this week for Dearborn, Mich., and a new job in the marketing department of
`Special Vehicle Operations with Ford Motor Co. where he expects to concentrate on Winston
`Cup and IndyCar racing.
`Clark has been named national team soccer coach for New Zealand and will be leaving in a
`couple of months.
`
`Hoffman said he is the only competitor from the East Coast among the 50 or socompetitors
`signed up to compete in the Iditasport next month. Given a choice of snowshoeing, cross-
`country skiing, mountain biking or a combination of all three, Hoffman will snowshoe the 75-
`mile race and hopes to finish in under 18 hours.
`- Elliman, 51, said his new job allows him to concentrate more on racing.
`“Speedway operations is a lot of stuff 4 tickets, security, parking, food and a lot that isn't
`racing,“ Elliman said. "That's cool. But I've always wanted to be involved with Winston Cup
`racing and Ithink I'm a little too old to drive."
`Though he's not sure of all the details, Elliman expects to be on the road at races half the
`weekends of the year and to work as a liaison between the racing series and the company.
`“Ultimately, they'd like to use racing to increase revenue with the sale of racing parts, racing
`T-shirts and souvenirs, and help the dealers to use racing to sell more vehicles," Elliman said.
`'The win on Sunday, sell on Monday philosophy."
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`Elliman remembers when NHIS was Bryar Motorsports Park in 1970.
`
`"Obviously, I think this place is phenomenal," Elliman said. "The growth of it has been
`fantastic. Whoever thought. it would happen in New England? Just to be involved with
`something as historic as this has been great."
`
`- Clark, 48,'wi|l coach New Zealand's Olympic and World Cup teams and will be involved in
`
`the country s entire program.
`
`'
`
`'
`
`Still, he was in no rush to leave.
`
`His wife, Betty, and son, Tommy, who played for him at Dartmouth, started the whole thing,
`Clark said. Blame it on them, or thank them, whichever way you want to look at it."
`
`The story goes back to a year ago Christmas when Betty received a book on New Zealand.
`Then his son spent four months in New Zealand last summer and called his mother one day
`to tell her about a great Job for his father. The Clarks were interested enough to put his
`
`name in.
`
`"They sent a headhunter type lad around," Clark said. "It was around the Princeton game. He
`watched us practice, watched us play, talked a little bit. I never thought very much about it.
`I thought I had done very well at telling him I didn't want to go."
`Clark was informed around Christmas that he had gone from a short list to an even shorter
`one, visited.New Zealand for six days and came away with a job offer.
`"It was a tough Christmas and New Year's," he said. "I was really torn. Dartmouth has meant
`so much to me. One of the hard things about leaving was that this is arguably the best squad
`of players we've ever had and we have a great schedule next year. That's tough, but it does
`ease the conscience a bit.'.'
`He looks forward to coaching in New Zealand, where rugby is king and the country's soccer
`highlight was making the 24-team World Cup finals in 1982.
`"New Zealand is a small country and the chance of it winning the World Cup would be very
`small," Clark said. "But we'll try to make it competitive. Being a Scotsman, it suits my
`personality. A small country, working a little bit against the odds. I think the challenge of
`building soccer there will be a bit the way Dartmouth was when I first came."
`Even more than Ivy League titles in 1988, 1990 and 1992 and advancing to the NCAA
`_
`quarterfinals in 1990 and 1992, Clark said, he will miss his fellow Dartmouth coaches,
`players he has been associated with through the years and the inroads soccer has made in
`
`the Upper Valley.
`- When last we checked on Hoffman, he had just_finished the Earth Journey in Vermont, a
`three-day marathon of a 12-mile canoe race and 95-mile bike ride on Day 1, 168—mile bike
`race Day 2, and 51-mile run on Day 3.
`Hoffman, who lives in Dover, is one person thankful for the bitter cold this winter.
`"It's been great for training "purposes," he said. "I've been doing a lot of training at night with
`a headlamp to try and get_ my body used to it. I haven't had any problems staying warm,
`though my face has been frostbit a bit. But it's not like it's 40 here and there it's 20 below,
`which is muchto my benefit. Last year's winner was from the North Pole."
`
`10/6/2005
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`gage 5 or 5
`
`The trail covers part of the Iditarod dogsled route.
`"They drop you off 65 miles out of Anchorage in nowhere," he said. "You go the 75 miles and
`they pick you up and fly you back. You're on your own. There's one checkpoint. They tell you
`if the weather goes bad, you're on your own. It's not only an endurance event. It's survival."
`
`Hoffman leaves Feb. 17 and plans to be back on Feb. 22.
`The University of New Hampshire's Department of Women's Athletics has announced the
`inaugural inductees into its Wildcat Winner's Circle Hall of Honor. The 1985 NCAA champion
`women's lacrosse team, the only team at the school to win an NCAA title, will be inducted
`along with Marion Beckwith of Durham, the former chairperson of UNH's Physical Education
`Department; former women's Athletic Director Gail Bigglestone; professional golfer Jane
`Blalock of Portsmouth and Boston; former field'hockey and lacrosse coach Marisa Didio;
`Olympic rower Liz Hills O‘Leary of Cambridge; field hockey and lacrosse standout Barbara
`Marois of Dover; and 1984 skiing Olympian Kelly Milligan of Salt Lake City, Utah. The
`induction ceremony will be held April 10 .
`.
`. Ralph Cox, Bruce‘ Gillies, Greg Moffettand John
`Gray will be among the former University of New Hampshire hockey stars who will take on
`the Boston Bruins Alumni Friday night at Snively Arena in a fundraising event. Johnny Bucyk,
`Brad Park, Terry O'Reilly, Ken Linseman, Reggie Lemelin and Jim Craig, are among those on
`the Bruins roster. The game is being put on by the Timberland Company in Hampton to
`benefit both the Richie McFarland Children's Center in Stratham and the Robert Kullen
`Scholarship Fund.
`'
`
`LOAD-DATE: March 22, 1994
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`I1
`Budding Scientist's Success Breaks the Mold The New York Times January 30, 1994, Sunday
`Late Edition - Final
`I
`
`Copyright 1994 The New York Times Company
`The New York Times
`
`January 30, 1994, Sunday, Late Edition - Final
`
`NAME: Jamel Oeser-Sweat
`
`SECTION: Section 1; Page 1; Column 2; National Desk
`
`LENGTH: 1723 words
`
`HEADLINE: Budding Scientist's Success Breaks the Mold
`
`BYLINE: By MATTHEW PURDY
`
`~
`BODY:
`Jamel Oeser-Sweat walks home at night from the subway, a 17-year-old in big black
`sneakers and a baseball cap, passing drug dealers asking: "What do you want? What do you
`want?" and young ladies making eyes at him.
`At his housing project on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, he sometimes has to stand on
`his toes in the elevator to avoid the urine puddles. Upstairs, the apartment is frayed and
`spare. His family only recently acquired a telephone. A good thing, too.) Opportunity is
`suddenly on the line.
`’
`"Harvard called last night," he said on Thursday. "The first thing I thought is, does this
`woman know she's calling the projects?"
`
`A Busy Schedule
`
`On Monday, Mr. Oeser-Sweat was named one of 40 fin
`5, all competing for $204,000 to be
`Science Talent Search scholarship out of 1,645 entrant
`t fortunate high school
`awarded in March. It is a remarkable achievement for even the mos
`student from the best of schools, which he is not.
`Out of_a fatherless, somewhat chaotic existence in the inner city, Mr. Oeser-Sweat has
`‘n Harlem two afternoons a
`cobbled together an impressive
`.
`_
`_
`week and runs activities and field trips for them on Saturdays. He has completed his
`requirements to become an Eagle Scout. He is president of a youth advisory council for
`Supportive Children's Advocacy Network, a social services agency. The Westinghouse honor
`has raised his accomplishments to a new level.
`
`‘
`
`Project Has 'Pu_blic Health Significance‘
`' For his project, Mr. Oeser-Sweat, a senior at Martin Luther King High School, traced bacteria
`bbing away dead skin. Working for two
`to luffa spongesand other materials used for scru
`years in a program for high schoo
`'
`'
`' 3| Center, he Showed that
`the materials could cause skin lesions
`
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`"The judges saw the value of the project because it has tremendous public health.
`significance," said Dr. Edward J. Bottone, a microbiologist who became a mentor and friend
`to Mr. Deser-Sweat, and who recommended the project after a hospital employee developed
`mysterious lesions.
`
`Mr.._Oeser-Sweat's selection is made sweeter because King, unlike the Bronx High School of
`Science and other competitive schools, is not known for producing Westinghouse finalists. In
`fact, he was the first entrant ever from the school, near Lincoln Center.
`
`Whatever he discovered among the petri dishes and microscopes of the laboratory is
`overshadowed by the principle he has proved in the rest of his life: that there is no absolute
`formula for success.
`.
`
`Last year, the same work won him a top award in the city Science Expo and an invitation to
`dinner at Gracie Mansion. In May, he went to Albany to receive a community service award
`from the state bar association.
`
`"It's like being Cinderella," he said. "You wear your suit and you go there and you have to be
`back in the projects by midnight.“
`
`Life in the projects held little for Mr. Oeser—Sweat (pronounced oh-AY-suhr SWETT), whose
`mild manner belies his drive. So he plunged himself into a range of activities, finding people
`along the way who cared for him and advised him -- in high school, at the Boy Scouts, at the
`social service program where he works and finally at Mount Sinai.
`
`"There's boo.k experience in education and there's life experience, and sometimes they come
`together," Dr. Bottone said. "It takes that rare opportunity. But a lot of kids don't get that
`opportunity. They need a hand extended to them."
`~
`
`Mr. Oeser—Sweat's family has lived in poverty since his father became ill with cancer when
`Mr. Oeser-Sweat was a year old and died three years later. Threatened by a social worker
`with losingher three sons to foster care if she did not leave the family's rundown South
`Bronx apartment, Mr. Oeser-Sweat's mother moved her family to the Prince George Hotel, a
`Manhattan hotel for the homeless that was infamous for its squalor and rampant drug-
`dealing. He remembers shootings in the lobby and drug addicts trying to sell their
`unden~ear.
`
`‘Did You Strike It Rich?‘
`Five years ago, after years on the pub|ic—housing waiting list, the family moved to the Saruch
`Houses. Mr. Oeser-Sweat's mother, Jeanieclai Sweat, said that when her sons saw their new
`home they asked her, "Mommy, did you strike it rich?"
`But within months of moving, Mrs. Sweat, who had been a foster child and has a chronic
`psychological_illness, was taken from their apartment to the hospital. Mr.‘ 0eser_-Sweat was
`put in a group home for boys and his two younger brothers were_p|aced in foster ‘care. The
`ambulance took her and the police took us," Mr. Oeser-Sweat said. "It was two nights before
`Thanksgiving."
`Mrs. Sweat's hospitalizationlwas brief, but it took her a.y_ear to convince the authorities that
`she was competent to care for her children and to reunite the family. In that period, Mr._
`Oeser-Sweat was in the eighth grade and began attending school regularly for the first time,
`he said.
`'
`'
`‘
`-
`'
`Although Mr. Oese_r-Sweat began reading at 5 and could write letters and numbers before
`
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`« kindergarten, Mrs. Sweat said she was unable to make him go to school regularly. But he
`said that while he was in the eighth grade, living in group homes in Brooklyn and Queens and
`separated from his mother and his friends, going to school in his neighborhood in lower
`Manhattan was the only connection to the life that he missed.
`
`"For the first time, school was the only anchor for my life," he said.
`
`An essay he wrote for his college applications begins with a loving poem about his mother, "I
`fiemlember Mama," which speaks about both the strength and pain he derived from his
`
`ami y:
`
`I remember«Mama and the times that we had
`
`I re_member~Mama when she held my hand when the world was all bad.
`And later in the poem he recounts]the night she was taken to the hospital:
`Most of all I remember Mama on that dreadful day
`
`As she was forced to the ground, as they took her away.
`
`I remember Mama my frightened thoughts then
`
`was I ever to see my mother again?
`
`There is a certain sadness to Mr. Oeser-Sweat, who is thin and just under 6 feet tall, with
`dark eyes, thick eyelashes, a thin mustache and wispy beard. He said he is told he rarely
`smiles and displays little enthusiasm, yet he has the bold confidence of youth.
`He said he reacted so mildly to the news of his Westinghouse selection that the woman who
`informed him on the telephone said, "You could be more enthusiastic."
`
`But last week, as he handed a visitor a four-page document, he said: "This was my resume
`in June. There's a lot more now."
`
`Mr. Oeserp-Sweat's accomplishments amaze even those who have known him for years.
`"It's been very rough," said Cynthia Smith, who works for the social service agency that
`helps the family and who has known them for five years. "This is a young man who has been
`in and out of group homes. He lived in a welfare hotel. He's run the gamut at school. He lives
`in the projects. The fact that he's been able to achieve what he's been able to achieve is
`phenomenal."
`While he was once a client of her agency, he is now an employee, tutoring children in
`Harlem.
`'
`
`Though he is a National Honor Society student, his grades have suffered under the_press of
`family responsibility, a_nd extracurricular work, said his principal, Stephanie Ferrandino. In
`fact, before his family got a telephone last year, Mr. Oeser-Sweat used to carry a beeper so
`he could be in touch with his community obligations.
`Mr. Oeser-Sweat"s grades (B average) and test scores (1030 on the S.A.T.'s) are not
`stunning, yet he has shown his teachers flashes of brilliance. When he took a biotechnology
`class in high school two years ago, his teacher, Michael Schonberg, noticed how quickly Mr.
`Oeser-Sweat was able to synthesize difficult information. He received a 99 on the final.
`
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`Appropriate Mentor
`
`"I couldn't give him 100 because he didn't cross some t's or something," said Mr. Schonberg,
`who then recommended him to the Secondary Education Through Health program at Mount
`Sinai. The program introduces mainly inner-city students to scientific fields.
`
`He was assigned to Dr. Bottone, and the two found synergy in a cluttered laboratory. Dr.
`Bottone, 59, grew up poor in East Harlem, took 21 years to complete his undergraduate and
`graduate degrees and understands the value of role models and heroes to kids struggling for
`hope. Growing up, one of Dr. Bottone's heroes was Joe DiMaggio.
`
`"Every time he hit a home run, he took all of us with him," Dr. Bottone said. "He lifted us out
`of our environment, out of the squalor that we were living in. when he would swing that bat
`you were levitated with him. You were carried by the flight of the ball."
`
`Pondering Stereotypes
`
`However high the trajectory of life, Dr. Bottone knows how difficult it is to shed one's
`shackles. So’ he was struck by Mr. Oeser-Sweat's poem "Heroism," with its refrain "Take a
`look at my life," about overcoming the stereotype of being young and black in America. Dr.
`Bottone had it published in the Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine. It reads, in part:
`
`.
`
`An old woman walks by and she clenches her purse
`
`When asked my opinion, I'm expected to curse.
`
`Take a look at my life.
`
`The poem ends with a reference to the distinction between escaping the inner city by dying
`and working one's way out:
`
`'
`
`Where a man examines his life and lets out a sigh
`
`He knows there is one way out -- that escape is to die
`
`Take a look _at my life.
`"For me it's the whole confidence thing," Mr._ Oeser-_Sweat said. "If you see bad, you'll l;l>"e
`bad. Dr. Bottone says you can't visualize yourself hitting a home run until you see one it.
`Now, Mr. Oeser-Sweat can visualize hitting another one. when Harvard called, he had beenk
`favoring Yale, but he demurred and will be at the Harvard Club for an interview in two wee s.
`He said he knows that his grades and standardized-test scores are below those of the
`average Ivy League student, but added, "I think my biggest selling point is that I can
`endure through things."
`"I was looking at the stuff from Harvard and it said a lot of kids don't make it through the
`first year because of too much pressure," he said. Then he chuckled at the thought of college
`life being too much to bear, and said, "What could stop me now?"
`
`"
`
`GRAPHIC: Photos: Jamel Oeser-Sweat, one of 40 finalists in the Westinghouse S_cien%e
`Talent Search scholarship. (pg. 1) ; Jamel Oeser-Sweat, left, a finalist for the nationwite
`Westinghouse Science Talent Search scholarship, has been honored by other groups, oo.
`
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`Page 3 01 3
`
`"It's like being Cinderella," Mr. Oeser-Sweat said. "You wear your suit and you go there and
`you have to be back in the projects by midnight." As part of a busy schedule, Mr. Oeser-
`Sweat tutors Janaya Rivas in English at Public School 121 on East 102d Street. (Suzanne
`DeChillofl’he New York Times) (pg. 36)
`
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`COLLEGE BASKETBALL;CoIumbia is Below .500 but Atop the Ivy The New York Times January
`30, 1994, Sunday, Late Edition - Final
`
`Copyright 1994 The New York Times Company
`The New York Times
`
`January 30, 1994, Sunday, Late Edition - Final
`
`SECTION: Section 8; Page 6; Column 1; Sports Desk
`
`LENIGTH: 5354 words '
`
`HEADLINE: COLLEGE BASKETBALL;
`Columbia is Below .500 but Atop the Ivy
`
`BYLIN E: By The Associated Press
`
`BODY:
`
`Columbia 77, Yale 58
`
`J. J. Waterer scored 6 of his game-high 19 points during a 16-0 run late in the second half,
`leading Columbia over visiting Yale, 77-58, last night. The Lions (6-10, 4-0) moved into first
`place in the Ivy League. They have not faced either Penn or Princeton.
`
`Columbia trailed Yale by as many as 12 points in the first half before closing to 30-26 on Fred
`Johnson's 3-point shot before the break. Yale
`(5-11, 2-2) held a 50-48 lead with 7:27 left. But C.J. Thompkins hit a 3-point shot that put
`Columbia ahead for good, and the Lions broke away behind Waterer.
`
`Penn (13-2, '3-0) handed Princeton (9-6, 2-1) its first Ivy defeat, 66-55, at Princeton. The
`Quakers had five players in double figures and led by 50-29 with 9:40 remaining.
`_
`
`Syracuse 87, Villanova 68.
`Lawrence Moten scored 11 of his 23 points during a 21-2 run at the end of the first half that
`carried No. 16 Syracuse to victory over visiting Villanova. Syracuse (13-3, 6-3 Big East)
`broke a four-game home losing streak to Villanova (6-9, 2-6 Big East). "We did to them what
`they usually do to us here, get ahead early and then spread it out," Syracuse Coach Jim
`Boeheim said.
`
`Providence 82, Notre Dame 75
`
`Michael Brown was nearly perfect in scoring 27 points to lead Providence (11-5) over Notre
`Dame at South Bend, Ind., extending the Irish losing streak to six games. Brown missed Just
`one of six 3-point attempts, made all four of his free throws and all four of his two-point
`shots. Notre Dame (5-13) led by as many as 10 points in the first half.
`
`Georgetown 77, Miami 40
`George Butler scored 15 points as Georgetown .routed Miami in Landover, Md. Georgetown
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`improved to 11-5 over all and 5-3 in the Big East. Miami (7-9,. 0-8) led early in the first half
`with the score standing at 5-4 for -5 minutes 17 seconds as both teams committed turnovers
`and traveling errors and missed free throws.
`
`St. Bonaventure 72, West Virginia 66
`
`Harry Moore scored 22 points and led St. Bonaventure to a rare victory over No. 19 West
`Virginia in _Olean, N.Y. The Bonnies (8-8, 2-4 Atlantic 10) ended an eight-game losing streak
`to west Virginia, and won for only the fourth time in the 36-game series. West Virginia (13-
`3, 6-2) scored the game's first eight points but the Bonnies had a 20-4 run midway through
`the first half and outrebounded West Virginia by 40-30.
`
`Fordham 84, Navy 72
`
`Sherwin Content and «Derek Molis scored 19 points apiece, and Fordham used a 10-2 spurt in
`the second half to break open a close game and beat Navy in the Rams‘ Rose Hill Gymnasium
`in the Bronx.
`.
`
`Drexel 100, Vermont 87
`
`Vermont's Eddie Benton set a school and North Atlantic Conference record with 54 points, but
`his team lost to Drexel in Burlington, Vt. The sophomore's 54 points, 44 in the second half,
`are.the most in Division I this season.
`-
`
`Rutgers 71, Duquesne,70-
`Rich Ashmeade hit a free throw with 4.6 seconds left in overtime as Rutgers defeated visiting
`Duquesne in Atlantic 10 play. The Scarlet Knights (6-10, 2-5 in the Atlantic 10) trailed the
`entire second half, but battled back to tie the game at 63-63 on two free throws by Pete
`Marcotte with 7.4 seconds left in regulation.
`
`LOAD-DATE: January 30, 1994
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`Source: News & Business > L\l_e_w§ > Major Newspapers
`Temis: "ivy league!" and date(geq (01I01I1994) and leq (01131/1994)) (§dLSea_rc_h I S_uggesfle.r1s£r_M!
`Search)

`' View: Full
`DatelTime: Thursday. October 6. 2005 - 4:57 PM EDT
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`About LexisNexis | Jgrms and Conditions
`
`Copmghi © 2005 LexlsNe_xis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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`http://www.lexis.com/research/retrieve?__m=32c383c3a16c20e651a76aaf98a8aab4&docnu...
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`NEXIS
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`DATABASE
`
`“Major Newspapers”
`
`January 1993
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`

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`s
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`earc
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`h-173R
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`esults
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`1vy league!
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`v-
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`Source: News 8. Business > News > Major Newspapers
`erms
`ivy league! and date(geq (01/01/1993) and Ieq (01/31/1993)) ( | Su
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`5Select for FOCUS” or Delivery
`[3
`1. , January 31, 1993, Sunday, City Edition; Correction
`y Appended, NEW HAMPSHIRE WEEKLY; Pg. 16, 1277 words, Wayne Robinson
`proving that less can bring more; NEW HAMPSHIRE WEEKLY / At Large / ALLEN
`LESSELS, By Allen Lessels, Globe Staff
`Tuesday before continuing its Ivy League schedule at Columbia and
`
`Cl
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`2- , January 31, 1993, Sunday, City Edition, LEARNING; Pg.
`29, 1007 words, Wellesley College loves the "Hillary Factor"; Among students,
`faculty, alumnae, feel-good mood is high at First Lady's alma mater, By Doreen
`Iudica Vigue, Globe Staff, WELLESLEY
`... in the same caliber of the Ivy Leagues, but that showed me that Wellesley
`
`IS
`
`3. , January 31, 1993, Sunday, FINAL EDITION, TRIBUNE BOOKS;
`Pg. 6; ZONE: C; Nonfiction, 820 words, Hunter Thompson: Eaten alive by an
`image, Reviewed by Peter Gorner, A Tribune writer
`friends were heading off to Ivy League colleges, Thompson was slated
`
`4. Chicago Tribune, January 31, 1993, Sunday, FINAL EDITION, SPORTS; Pg. 5;
`ZONE: C; National roundup, 1172 words, From Chicago Tribune wires
`10-4, 3-0 Ivy League) used a 19-
`‘
`'
`10-6) ran its Ivy League record to 4-0 for the
`
`5. The Independent (London), January 31, 1993, Sunday, ARTS PAGE; Page
`19 , 1002 words, THEATRE / Miller back on form with a losers‘ tale, By IRVING
`WARDLE
`_
`dresses like an Ivy League professional, turns out to be
`6. Los Angeles Times, January 31, 1993, Sunday, Home Edition, Sports; Part C;
`Page 13; Column 1; Sports Desk, 928 words, COLLEGE BASKETBALL REGIONAL
`ROUNDUP; COLORADO STATE GETS HELP, SURPRISES UTAH, From Associated
`
`Press
`46, in an Ivy League game at Philadelphia. .
`.
`.
`7. Los Angeles Times, January 31, 1993, Sunday, Home Edition, Part A; Page 3;
`Column 1; Metro Desk, 795 words, ON CALIFORNIA: NOTES ON THE FIRST TO
`FALL, By PETER H. KING
`_
`talk is of SAT scores and Ivy League requirements. While I
`8. The New York Times, January 31, 1993, Sunday, Late Edition - Final, Section 8;
`Page 6; Column 1; Sports Desk, 865 words, COLLEGE BASKETBALL; Hurley Hits a
`3 That Provides More Than Just Points, AP, COLLEGE PARK, Md., Jan. 30
`victory, increasing the Lions‘ Ivy League record to 4-0 for the
`9. The Washington Post, January 31, 1993, Sunday, Final Edition, SHARON PRATT
`KELLY, WASHINGTON POST MAGAZINE; PAGE W11, 12172 words, THE MAYOR S
`MYSTIQUE, Peter Perl
`_
`a town full of Ivy League lawyers, she fixed me with the Book-of-the—
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`10. Los An eles Times, January 30, 1993, Saturday, Orange County.Edition, Sports-
`:aEr£tLlCéYPage 20; Column 1; Sports Desk, 280 words, PREP NOTES, By MIKE
`But Ivy League schools don't offer
`
`11. , January 30, 1993, Saturday, Late Edition - Final, Section 1;
`Page 32; Column 2; Sports Desk, 675 words, RESULTS PLUS
`last night in Ivy League play. Columbia (8-
`
`12. Newsda New York , January 30, 1993, Saturday, CITY EDITION, SPORTS;
`LOCAL COLLEGES; Pg. 79, 433 words, Big Comeback Lifts Evers Over
`Pratt, COLLEGES; BASKETBALL
`1, 0-1 in the Ivy League. Track. P'ost's Jose
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`[j
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`-
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`.
`Re ister California , January 30, 1993 Saturday, MORNING
`13. Oran e Coun
`EDITION, Pg. B03;, 527 words, It takes all kinds to give Melrose its style,‘ Marnie
`McLeod, South County News
`owners. They are not all Ivy League and they're not all
`
`[:3
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`14. The San Francisco Chronicle, JANUARY 30, 1993, SATURDAY, FINAL
`EDITION, SPORTS; Pg. D5, 440 words, COLLEGE BASKETBALL Waves: 38th
`Straight WCC Win
`a 74-63 Ivy League victory over Brown
`
`15. The Washington Post, January 30, 1993, Saturday, Final Edition, EDITORIAL;
`PAGE A21, 993 words, The M&B Class, Richard Harwood
`governing them." Many attended Ivy League schools or studied abroad and
`..."children could prep for the Ivy League in either public or
`
`16. Chicago Tribune, January 29, 1993, Friday, NORTH SPORTS FINAL
`EDITION, NEWS; Pg. 4;- ZONE: N, 458 words, English is restored in Puerto
`Rico, Associated Press, BAYAMON, Puerto Rico
`But Rossello, an Ivy League-educated physician, argued the "
`_ 17. Los Angeles Times, January 29, 1993, Friday, Home Edition, Part A; Page. 22;
`Column 1; _National Desk, 342 words, ‘ENGLISH ALSO‘ IS NOW LAW IN PUERTO
`RICO, From Associated Press, BAYAMON, Puerto Rico
`But Rossello, an Ivy League-educated physician, argued that the
`
`F
`.
`18. St. Petersbur Times Florida [January 29, 1993, Friday, City
`Edition, COMMUNITY TIMES; Pg. 6, 996 words, Guy Toph award winner in
`shock‘, ERNEST HOOPER, TAMPA
`play Division III or Ivy League football. Princeton, Middlebury,
`
`.
`_
`19. Chica 0 Tribune, January 28, 1993, Thursday, NORTH SPORTS FINAL
`EDITION, SPORTS; Pg. 1; ZONE: N, 1520 words, WSCR: Little station gains big
`reputation, By Robert Markus
`recruited by most Ivy League schools and eventually went to
`
`http://www.lexis.com/research/retrieve?_m=c060a8dc72f5c85ee53bS7623b8bdad1&csvc=... 10/6/2005
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`20. Financial Times London En land , January 28, 1993, Thursday, Pg. 4, 1163
`words, Favoured five await the presidential nod: Mexicans spot clues to new
`president, By DAMIAN FRASER
`'
`schools at US Ivy League universiti

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