Word: shut
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Jones and Putnam of Cornell will probably take again the first two places in the half-mile. Bodley of Pennsylvania, Dolan of Dartmouth, and Hayes of Princeton are apt to shut out the Harvard runners. Jones of Cornell will also run the mile and should have little difficulty in winning it. Taber of Brown, and Maderia of Pennsylvania will fight it out for the other places...
...Waltham Celtic Association Football Club swamped the Freshman soccer team in a game at Waltham on Saturday afternoon, winning 6 to 0. The Freshman forwards still lack team work, and this was responsible for the shut-out. Nichols and Tapping starred for the 1915 team...
...University hockey team, playing a game which for all-round excellence has hardly been equalled at the Arena this year shut out the previously undefeated McGill team there on Saturday evening by a score of 3 to 0. The victory was a decisive one, and more than made up for the 5 to 2 defeat suffered at the hands of the same team last year...
...puck through the whole McGill team, fooling the defence, who expected him to pass, and easily pushed it by Warwick. Blackall and Willets were strong on the defence, but nevertheless McGill was continually shooting at Gardner; and it was his work in blocking these shots which made possible a shut out. Thirty stops were placed to his credit, many of which were made on fast and accurate shots by Thompson and Scott, and two or three on quick shots from scrimmages close to the goal. None of the forwards could equal Huntington, although all played consistently good games. Pierce especially...
...private gain, the motive of self-interest again and again conflicts with the public good. But apart from deliberate disregard for the public welfare by individuals, the present system of industry is continually breaking down from forces inherent in itself. For instance, when production is curtailed; when the shops shut down and people are thrown out of employment because of "over-production,"--because too much has been produced! What a paradox! Poverty caused by overabundance! And can a system of industry continue which inevitably divides society into two hostile classes whose struggle often breaks out into a state bordering...