Word: berkeley
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...veteran-studded eight from Eliot House found little difficulty in walking off with the House championship yesterday afternoon. Outdistancing their nearest rival, the Kirkland Deacons, by three full lengths, the Merrymen won for themselves the right to oppose Yale's Berkeley College eight Saturday at Derby...
...Merck Deborah Law, Boston Norman Meyer Judith Marsh, Wellesley James N. Miller Margaret Forsythe, Wellesley Maynard M. Miller Audrey Leighton, Wellesley Hills Richard G. Mintz Rosanne Saftil, Brookline Samuel J. Mixter Vallory Willis, New York Robert M. Moore, Jr. Kay Morley, Wellesley William S. Moore, Jr. Mary Blackwell, Farmington Berkeley D. More Sue Hoover, Wellesley Charles H. Morin Billie Loftus, Miss Wheelock's Clarendon Mower, Jr. Mary Anderson, Bradford Junior College James A. Murphy, Jr. Helen Eggart, Radcliffe Howard T. Oedel Carolyn Townsend, Walnut Hill School Harry O'Hare Pauline Callahan, Wellesley Shelby H. Page Polly Faulkner, Cambridge William...
Dickerman won his numerals as a Freshman and has been awarded Varsity letters in both his Sophomore and Junior years. Edward P. Allis '41 of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, will succeed Marion B. Seevers '40 of Adams House and Berkeley, California as manager...
...personal expenses of six players to Manhattan: Fred Perry from Los Angeles, $312.23; Ellsworth Vines from Miami, $213.20; Donald Budge from Hollywood, Fla., $195.73; Barnes and Tilden from Asheville, N. C. (a journey that costs ordinary travelers approximately $45 round trip with lower berth), respectively $284.50 and $400 flat; Berkeley Bell from his home in suburban Forest Hills (normally a 5? subway ride), $50. Total...
...four-minute mile, a seven-foot high jump, a 15-foot pole vault were considered as unlikely as a cow jumping over the moon. Year after year U. S. athletes, a dedicated, concentrated and highly competitive lot, have approached nearer & nearer these impossible figures. Last week, at Berkeley, Calif., Pole Vaulter Cornelius Warmerdam of the San Francisco Olympic Club became the first trackman officially to do the "impossible." In a triangular track meet (University of California, Washington State College, San Francisco Olympic Club) he succeeded in clearing the bar at 15 ft.-one inch higher than the world...