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Pete Summers and John Copeland ended a 149-minute starvation period for the varsity hockey team last night. With each scoring a goal, as a disorganized Crimson sextet edged Princeton, 2 to 1, in the Dedication game of the Watson Rink.
The goals, which both came in the third period were the varsity's first scores since last week's Northeastern game.
The victory, before a crowd of 1700, which included nearly all of the University Administration, assured the Crimson of at least a tie for the Ivy League championship.
Although the varsity constantly outrushed and occasionally outshot the Princeton sextet, it was never certain that the Crimson would be able to pull out of its late season slump and defeat the Tigers.
Without a brilliant performance by goalie Charlie Flynn, who turned in 42 saves, Princeton might have clinched the game in its scrappy second period. The Crimson's usual sore spot, its blue line unit, again could not ward off opposing attacks and usually only Flynn's cautious play was able to keep the varsity within reach of the tiger's brief lead.
In the first period, the varsity first line of Bob Cleary, Pete Summers, and Lyle Guttu several times narrowly missed beating Tiger goalie Dave Robinson. More often, however, they could not set up play around the cage.
Roger Boocock netted the lone Princeton score at 14:17 of the second stanza, while the Crimson was lapsing deeper into the playmaking difficulty that has plagued it for the last two games.
Summers, however, in his usual hustling economic reforms, he stated. "Collective bargaining, equalizing of funds, graduated income tax, and the Federal Reserve System, were elements of Wilson's economic policy which show that he went far beyond the merely negative policy of trying to resume competition," the leading Keynesian economist concluded.
Talking of his role as president, Herzog said that despite several failings, Wilson accomplished both his major personal objectives: one, his assertion of executive leadership; and two, the submission of issues to the people for their judgment.
McIlwain, an intimate friend of Wilson in his early Princeton days, reminisced extemporaneously
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