Word: tend
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Rather slow skating and dazed nervous playing featured the work of the University yearlings in the beginning of the first period, and as a result O'Hearn after several unsuccessful dashes, penetrated the defense and sent a well-placed shot through Sherman, Crimson goal tend. H. W. Reid, substituting for Walker, collaborated with Crosby in tieing the score a moment later. Coming down on Brokaw, the Yale goal, Crosby shot only to have the puck rebound from Brokaw's legs; Reid stabbed at the puck lying in front of the goal to have it stopped again, and Crosby, following...
...zero score to show that the New Jersey seven had been on the rink at all. Seven times a Crimson skater rammed the puck past Captain Maxwell, presiding at the cage for the Orange and Black, and only a remarkable display of dexterity and coolness by the visiting goal-tend kept the total from running well into two figures...
...tend for the visitors, is likely to have an opportunity to show his wares on the Arena surface tonight, provided the Crimson line work is up to scratch...
...reviewer wonders as he puts down the Advocate why it is that college literary magazines, if they are not cheap,--and the Advocate is never cheap,--tend to be pale and bloodless things, useful for the purpose of enabling their writers to see their work in print, but of little general interest to the college commu- nity. Isn't it possible that this is because most of the contributions to college literary magazines are written, not to entertain the undergraduates and their friends, but to meet the requirements of some course in English Composition, and are subsequently turned over...
...objected that a permanent limitation in size will work against the democratic principles which have so long been the boast of American universities, but the result would probably tend toward a greater rather than a diminished democracy. The only method of selection open to the university which artificially limits its student body would be that of competitive examinations open to all applicants, a process which in itself would help to climinate from the university much of its present deadwood. The mere bangers-on of the universities would become a thing of the past...