Word: tucked
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...tuck contest from start to finish the winning streak of the 1922 nine was finally broken by the tiger freshmen in the twelfth inning of the game at Princeton Saturday. Failure to bunch hits when they were needed was the reason for the 5-4 score against the Crimson yearlings...
...would be very comfortable if the United States could tuck its head under its wing, and enjoy a dove-like sleep while the rest of the world was in flames. That is simply impossible. The policy of Washington and Jefferson applied to the conditions and times of Washington and Jefferson. The Monroe Doctrine was necessary when it was possible for the United States-to keep out of world politics. A country like ours, with possessions in Asia, in the North Pacific, in the Caribbean, in Central America, simply cannot carry out a policy of isolation. Nor can the richest country...
...featured by even stiffer play, the University informal hockey players were unable to do more than tie their opponents by the score of 1 to 1. Each of the goals was made near the middle of the first half, and from that time on the play was nip and tuck, with neither side out-balancing the other and with comparatively few chances for either seven to increase its score. Both teams showed poor team-work...
...reception was given on November 6 at which the patronesses were Mrs. William G. Sharp, Mrs. James R. Barbour, Mrs. Robert W. Bliss, Mrs. Persifor F. Gibson, Mrs. James H. Hyde, Mrs. Lawrence Slade and Mrs. Edward Tuck. The reception marked the formal ceremonies of opening the Union, although it had been in working order since October...
...will take place next Monday afternoon, November 26, at 4 o'clock, when the University Committee on Military Science and Tactics will review the Corps on Soldiers Field. This committee consists of ten members: George Baty Blake '93, Franklin Delano Roosevelt '04, Amos Tuck French '85, Langdon Parker Marvin '98, Samuel Parker, George Cheever Shattuck '01, William Davies Sohier '11, Eliot Wadsworth '98, Alexander Whiteside '95, and Major-General Leonard Wood, M.D., '84. Although all these men will not be able to be present, it is expected that most of them will be here on that date...