Word: beekmans
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Grant's match in the State squash championship race was the highlight of the weekend athletic events. Defeating Patterson of the Business School, 3-2 in a tight five-game match, he is the worthy successor to Beekman Pool '32, who has won this tournament for the last two years, and who just won the New York State crown...
...Manhattan home is on Beekman Place, overlooking the East River. Welfare Island and the belching factories of Brooklyn. In it is a brocade divan from Mrs. Partridge Presents, a chair from The Dover Road, a table from The Green Hat, a portrait from The Age of Innocence. They also have a home at Sneden's Landing, a small colony tucked under the Hudson palisades some 20 mi. from Manhattan. In the course of a wedding celebrated there last year by her landlady's son. Miss Cornell and "Flush," the water spaniel who was in The Barretts, were pitched into...
...Paine Whitney Memorial Gymnasium. Coach Cowles also plans to enter a team picked from the varsity squad in the National Championships, to be held at Baltimore on February 11, 12, 13. Last year's team scored a clean swoop in the Nationals for the first time since '1925, with Beekman Pool '32 winning the National Singles Championship. The Harvard racquet men also won the Intercollegiates last year...
Announcement of the awarding of a major H to Beekman Pool '32, of New York City, a member of the University squash team, was made yesterday by the Committee on the Regulation of Athletic Sports. This award is made in recognition of his winning the Intercollegiates, National, Canadian, State, and Gold Racquets Championships in squash this season...
Learning tennis, at Piping Rock Club, L. I., the Pool brothers, Lawrence and Beekman, often tried the patience of their instructors; but they acquired the foundation for the squash rackets they learned later, at Harvard. At the National Squash Rackets tournament in Baltimore, last week, Lawrence Pool, defending champion, lost to T. E. Jansen Jr., of Boston, in the quarterfinals. Next day, Jansen played Younger Brother Beekman Pool who, still at Harvard and vastly improved in the last year, was at the top of his graceful, fast and brilliantly deceptive game. Pool won the first two sets...