Word: featness
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...caged the puck for the Crimson's first score. Halfway through the first period Captain Ellison dashed down the left lane and netted a powerful drive from an acute angle. A. Matte made the lone Canadian tally near the period's close on a duplicate of Ellison's feat...
Only a genuine joy-killer would point out that passing examinations is only the routine duty of students in every college, and not a feat of heroism calling for an extraordinary reward. It would be a useless effort on the part of the joy-killer, at that. There is among most of the student body after every examination period, a feeling that they have studied harder than ever, and that they deserve a high grade, whether or not they receive it. It is better to celebrate, by all means, while this righteous mood endures, than to wait for the cold...
...Crimson jumped into an early lead when Ellison counted twice in the early stages of the first period. Sherman, who started at goal for Dartmouth, allowed two easy shots to pass him. Dartmouth evened the count at the end of the second period, when Hardy duplicated Captain Ellison's feat, scoring two unassisted goals in quick succession. The second period saw both teams setting a furious pace and the University counted twice, putting the game on ice. The Dartmouth six tired perceptibly in the final period, and the University playing a defensive game had little trouble in preserving its lead...
Arizona. On New Year's Day, Governor George W. P. Hunt, bald and portly, onetime cowpuncher, who might well be called the father of his state, was inaugurated for the sixth time. No living Governor in the U. S. can boast of such a feat. Only one other man has ever been Governor of Arizona...
...progress in the projection of motion pictures by radio. A central difficulty, the translation of optical images into electric current capable of impelling bands of ether waves, had already been surmounted by experimenters with the photoelectric cell and amplifier, used in motionless television and telephotography. Dr. Alexanderson's feat was to utilize a beam of light (which in motionless telephotography has from 2 to 20 minutes to trace and transmit the desired light-pattern or image) at unprecedented speed, so that it could render a complete image within the minimum time that the human eye will catch an image...