Word: tates
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Crimson netminders Cheryl Tate, fully recovered from a leg injury against B.U., and Laura Zuckerman, who came on in the third period, had a quiet afternoon in Maine, stopping only five shots between them...
With 6:31 remaining and the game deadlocked at 1-1, Eagle wing Connie Wilson unleashed a slapshot on the fly, followed up her own rebound, and flipped the puck past Crimson netminder Cheryl Tate for the game winner...
With Harvard seemingly in control, B.C. got a break and knotted the score two minutes later. Eagle Lynn Murray intercepted an errant clearing pass at the Harvard blue line and fired a drive at a screened Tate. The shot deflected off a skater in front and floated over Tate's shoulder...
Though the Agrarians mostly remained farmers of the typewriter in real life, on paper they kept insisting that "the culture of the soil is the best and most sensitive of vocations." Tate was one of the few to own, briefly, a genuine farm, Ben's Folly, honestly named for the brother who financed it. A hired hand delivered the final word on Farmer Tate: "Mr. Tate, he ain't much of a hand with...
...stroll across the Vanderbilt campus on an autumn afternoon is to see legends spring dazzling in the soft blue air-a little blurred, of course, as all good legends should be. Over there (nobody remembers quite where) Tate used to address a class of undergraduates. He was a severely handsome man who looked rather like a Confederate cavalry officer, and when he spoke of "the Republic of Letters," fond students could practically hear bugles blowing and see banners flying...