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Word: cage (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Harvard women's basketball team must be anxious for Briggs Cage to reopen. The hoopsters lost their third straight at the old IAB this weekend, taking last place in the first annual Harvard Women's Basketball Tournament...

Author: By Jon Losos, | Title: Women Hoopsters Drop Two, Place Last in Home Tourney | 11/30/1981 | See Source »

Harvard's academic reputation and a flexible, improving basketball program drew both players to Cambridge, though they were initially promised posh lodgings at a renovated Briggs Cage, not the fifth-floor high school gym at the IAB. In making his choice. Ferry--the more highly touted of the pair--benefited from the guidance of two fairly well-educated basketball men: his father, Bob Ferry Sr., general manager of the Washington Bullets, and Celtic guru Red Auerbach, a family friend...

Author: By Paul M. Barrett, | Title: Freshman Duo Dazzle in Preseason | 11/24/1981 | See Source »

...steel pen. He has spent another two days airborne over Yellow Creek, scouting the precise location to erect it. Crawford chooses a gully at the confluence of three trails near a favorite watering spot. His crew toils for a day under a blistering sun erecting the 10-ft.-high cage, securing it with iron stanchions and braces of lodgepole pine, and camouflaging its sides with sage and chimisa bush...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Colorado: Chasing the Mustangs | 11/16/1981 | See Source »

...will be capitalizing on their scoring opportunities, particularly the short corners. "We want to continue doing what we've been doing all season, but not as much fooling around with the ball. No fancy stuff. Just get the ball down the field and think about getting it in the cage," said Harvard assistant coach Gina Buggy...

Author: By Becky Hartman, | Title: Stickwomen Head to Easterns, Looking for Spot in Nationals | 11/7/1981 | See Source »

...affecting, but the film's moralizing tone demands he be taken seriously. Maybe that's a jump a kid can make, but it's trying for anyone else. Straining, also, is some of the "suspense" lumbering across the screen, such as an elaborate, impossible escape from a cage floating in a void...

Author: By --david M. Handelman, | Title: A Victim of the Modern Age | 11/6/1981 | See Source »

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