Word: savely
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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After a great split save by Jones at the three minute mark, the varsity forced play in the Yale zone until the puck was tied up at 4:27 for a faceoff in the circle to Jones' right. Reilly swung as the referee dropped the puck. His shot caught the goalie flat-footed in the near corner, bouncing into the left-hand side to tie the game...
...Yorkers and 370,000 commuters trip fantastically over one another on sidewalks and subway platforms, particularly in the morning and evening rush hours. Last week, climaxing a two-year house-by-house survey, the City Planning Commission brought forth a hardheaded proposal: the only way to save New York from death by overcrowding is to regulate the use of residential buildings so that no more than 10,940,000 people can ever live in the city-compared to the 55 million who could legally crowd in under present zoning laws. Taking aim at an antiquated zoning code, the survey recommended...
...second period. Paul Kelley received credit for a goal at 9:19 when he deflected Les Duncan's shot through his own legs as Duncan screened Frankenberg. Defenseman Ostebo hit the lower right corner with a long shot at 12:27, as Pratt failed with a leg save...
From the opening whistle, the Cornell game could hardly be called a contest. Harry Pratt had a single save in the Crimson nets during the first period, while Peter Tague stopped only three more shots in the rest of the "contest." Jack Detwiler, victim of a seemingly hapless defense, nevertheless stopped the nearly astronomical total of 61 shots...
...Quixote the portrait of a Christian saint? W. H. Auden argues that it is, that Don Quixote sees his mission as "the World-that which needs my existence to save it at whatever cost to myself. He comes into collision with the real world but insists upon continuing to suffer [and] never despairs." When readers first meet Don Quixote, continues Auden, "he is (a) poor (b) not a knight, (c) 50, (d) has nothing to do except hunt and read romances about Knight-Errantry . . . Suddenly he goes mad, i.e., he sets out to become what he admires . . . Religiously...