Word: queenly
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Breaking a tie in the last few minutes of play, the University hockey team defeated the Queen's College sextet 2 to 1 in a close and exciting game at the Arena last night. Both teams scored in the initial period and from then until Crosby scored the winning goal late in the third period, neither team had any advantage. The Canadians had an excellent defense which stopped the University forwards again and again by superb work, but inaccurate passing robbed them of more than one scoring opportunity...
...from the right lane. Bigelow stopped the puck, but it glanced off, barely sliding into the net. Near the close of the same period, Guild skated by one defense man and then scored the first Crimson goal on a long shot. During the whole latter part of the period, Queen's used a three man defense. Bigelow, who played a very steady game at goal, prevented another Canadian score by a pretty stop, before the end of the second period, when two Canadians slipped inside the defense...
Season tickets will not admit to tonight's contest. Reserved seats may be purchased at the H. A. A. st $2.20, $1.65, and $1.10. HARVARD QUEEN'S COLLEGE Walker, l.w. r.w., Brown Guild, c. c., Boucher Larocque, r.w. l.w., Gibson Crosby, l.d. r.d., Smith Owen, r.d. l.d., McDonald Flint or Bigelow, g. g., Quinn
Handicapped by the illness of two forward-line regulars, Beals, whose work at center has been outstanding, and Hill, who has played an effective game at right wing; the University hockey team will face the aggressive Queen's College sextet tonight at 8.15 o'clock at the Arena. Queen's, although it met defeat by a 2 to 1 score at the hands of Boston College on Monday, is one of the strongest of Canadian college teams. Among its victims is McGill University, which defeated Yale on its recent trip in this country. Smith and McDonald, the defensive pair...
...life-size wooden statue of a young woman, coated over with plaster, and painted with an enigmatic smile which can only be compared to that of the comparatively young and blooming Mona Lisa. This inhabitant of Egypt, past and present, may be a likeness of her imperial majesty, Queen Ankhsenpaten, for she has gazed at the dead prince with a never-failing smile for more than a hundred generations--proof enough of devotion. But some skeptics claim that she is merely the model on which the queen tried her new evening gowns...