Word: netted
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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From three years ago, however, there is an erstwhile freshman goalie named Ron Wilson who had given up the game until he got wind of Coach Bruce Monro's plight. He is literally all that stands between Harvard opponents and an open net...
Munro will continue to experiment this week, switching midfielders and attack men around. He may even try sophomore Fife Symington, a defenseman, who has never played goalie before, in the net, because if Ron Wilson ever gets hurt or penalized in a game, Munro is going to have himself a problem...
...qualifications on this forecast. Even if the election were held today, it is by no means clear that the Labour majority would be so great. Labour has led in the national polls throughout its 17 months in office, but in seven of eleven by-elections there has been a net-swing to the Conservatives. Moreover, the average shift in local council by-elections suggest that the Conservatives have kept pace with Labour...
...their shopping at the Great Market Hall-a vast, unheated, barnlike building where sausages and onions dangle from the beams, dung-smeared chicken eggs sell for a dollar a dozen, and delectable fish called fogas goggle stupidly from their tanks at the customers, then disappear, still wriggling, into net shopping bags...
...into a large and particularly complicated world. One of its complications is, of course, the cold war rivalry, which so far has worked to the new nations' advantage by providing two competitive founts of aid. "The bipolar power structure provides," says Harvard's Joseph Nye, "a safety net underneath these nations as they play on their tightrope." If ever the U.S. and the Soviet Union get together and agree on spheres of influence, however, the new nations may find themselves with no net to fall into; in the interim, they had better acquire some bounce. The 20th century...