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Word: minis (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...teams split the series, a 10-minute mini-game will be played. If the mini-game is tied, the squads will play sudden-death overtime periods until one scores...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ECAC PLAY OFF SEEDS | 3/5/1985 | See Source »

...ECAC quarterfinals are two game series with seed 8 at seed 1, seed 7 at seed 2, seed 6 at seed 3 and seed 5 at seed 4. If the teams split the two game series, a 10-minute mini-game decides the winner. Team W L T Pts. RPI* 18 1 0 .947 Harvard* 14 4 1 .763 Clarkson* 14 5 0 .737 Cornell* 13 0 1 .684 Yale* 12 7 1 .625 St. Lawrence* 10 9 0 .526 Colgate* 8 11 0 .421 Princeton 6 11 2 .368 Brown 6 14 0 .300 Vermont...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ECAC Standings | 2/28/1985 | See Source »

...excellent music and choreography than in any single performance. By the fourth scene, though, the audience is clearly itching to get back to subplot A--Harvard undergrads and alumni of what may be the most anachronistic club on campus dress up, drink up, and go wild. The mini-kickline near the close of the act brings rabid cheers from a crowd that smells serious socializing just down the aisle...

Author: By Holly A. Idelson, | Title: Taking in a Show--Or Two | 2/20/1985 | See Source »

...will look like is known only to Hyundai officials, who have code named it the X car. It will be unveiled in March and is expected to sell for as little as $5,000. That would make it cheaper than the Japanese-made Suzuki (base price: $5,151), a mini sold by Chevrolet as the Sprint in nine Western states and the lowest-priced car in America. The larger car, the Stellar, will begin at $7,000. Hyundai intends to begin assaulting the American market in California, where the Japanese also started...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Korean Chrome Heads for the U.S. | 2/11/1985 | See Source »

Underlying the proposal for a random lottery is the notion that, somehow, the Houses should be microcosms, mini-Colleges in themselves, each reflecting Harvard's overall diversity. To support then cause, the proponents of randomization marshall a variety of statistics on the concentration of certain groups in different Houses as proof that the goal of diversity is far from realized. The Council's report on the lottery cites figures stating, for instance, that one House consists of 45.7 percent varsity athletes while another has only 4.7 percent; minorities make up 17 percent of one House but have only...

Author: By Jeffrey A. Zucker | Title: Homes, Not Houses | 2/6/1985 | See Source »

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