Word: outer
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...especially in the second half. The University attack was strong, as usual, and by good team-play, clever stick-work and brilliant individual playing, kept the ball in Cornell's territory most of the time. Cornell's attack, however, was unable to penetrate Harvard's stubborn defence consistently. The outer-defence, stronger than ever before this season, was so effective that Lincoln at goal had only two stops to make. All men on the University team played excellently, so that to mention one whose individual brilliancy was especially marked would be unfair to the others. For Cornell, Captain Bond, Kerr...
...Varsity Club adjoining the Union, erected in memory of F. H. Burr '09 will be finished about the first of April, and the University baseball training table will move in by the fifteenth. At present the whole outer structure is completed, and inside there remains to be installed only the electric fixtures, the cabinet work and flooring, and the main staircase. The elaborate precautions taken by the architect, T. M. Shaw '00, to insure the maximum of light and fresh air, together with the elegance of the building as a whole, will provide the teams with much more competent...
...were the stars for Cornell and, although not up to the standards of Magner and Crassweller, of last year's championship team, they played much the same sort of roving game. Time and again these men took the puck down the rink unaided, Hill several times skating round the outer defence right in front of the goal. On these occasions it was only the excellent work of Gardner that prevented scores...
...spoiling many of Baker's opportunities for shots, while the latter was conspicuous in his sprints down the ice, one of which made the second score possible. Gardner at goal proved himself the equal of Kalbfleisch, and the three shots he missed were practically impossible to stop. The outer defence, Blackall and Willetts, did excellent work in breaking up Princeton's attack and were of material aid in feeding the puck to the forwards. The same fault may be found with the offence that has been found with the offence that has been found wanting all season--it lacks that...
...anecdotes, serving as contributions of fiction, are the merest amiable trifles, though Mr. Peterson's work again declares his rare faculty of careful observation of outer nature and of personal emotion. In "Lost at Sea" Mr. Gilkey has wasted his finished metrical technique and his vivid sense of the rhythm of blank verse upon an incoherent story of a poetical cabin boy marooned upon a desert island by an ogre-like sea captain. Had the poem been long enough to admit of an explanation of the captain's hatred, the narrative might at least have seemed possible...