enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: harvard air hockey table pucks

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Air hockey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_hockey

    Air hockey is a game resting on an older technology, the air table. Air tables began as a conveyor technology allowing heavy objects like cardboard boxes to easily slide over a table surface. The original air tables of the 1940s had rather large holes that were plugged by ball bearings.

  3. Table shuffleboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_shuffleboard

    A shuffleboard player taking a shot. Table shuffleboard (also known as American shuffleboard, indoor shuffleboard, slingers, shufflepuck, and quoits, sandy table) is a game in which players push metal-and-plastic weighted pucks (also called weights or quoits) down a long and smooth wooden table into a scoring area at the opposite end of the table.

  4. Brunswick Bowling & Billiards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunswick_Bowling_&_Billiards

    Logo used by Brunswick Billiards. The billiards division was established in 1845 and was Brunswick Corporation's original business. Brunswick Billiards designs and/or markets billiards table, table tennis tables, air hockey tables, and other gaming tables, as well as billiard balls, cues, game room furniture, and related accessories, under the Brunswick and Contender brands. [1]

  5. Hockey puck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_puck

    A standard ice hockey puck. A hockey puck is either an open or closed disk used in a variety of sports and games. There are designs made for use on an ice surface, such as in ice hockey, and others for the different variants of floor hockey which includes the wheeled skate variant of inline hockey (a.k.a. roller hockey).

  6. Tim Weissman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Weissman

    Tim Weissman (born 1970) is a clinical psychologist and ten-time world champion in the sport of professional air hockey. [1] He is a major subject of the documentary Way of the Puck. He is credited for creating a move called the "circle drift." [2] He has also been referred to as "the Kasparov of air hockey." [3]

  7. Malkin Athletic Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malkin_Athletic_Center

    The Malkin Athletic Center (MAC) is a 1,000-seat multi-purpose arena and athletic facility at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. [1]Originally known as the Indoor Athletic Building (IAB), [2] it is now named after Peter L. Malkin, who helped fund the refurbishment of the building in 1985.

  8. Shufflepuck Café - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shufflepuck_Café

    Shufflepuck Café is an air hockey video game developed by Christopher Gross, Gene Portwood and Lauren Elliott for Broderbund (not a table shuffleboard video game, as the name would suggest—though that was the intention when the name was first coined by Christopher Gross).

  9. Tripp Tracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripp_Tracy

    Tracy played junior hockey for the Detroit Compuware Ambassadors of the NAHL for two years and was then a goalie for Harvard University for four years. In his first two seasons at Harvard, he shared goaltending minutes with classmate Aaron Israel; he became the lone starter in 1994, his junior year, when Israel left to join the Philadelphia Flyers' farm system.

  1. Ads

    related to: harvard air hockey table pucks