Word: bout
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Wright '42, Winfield Alberts '42, and Robert Batt '41 made up the saber trio. Their bout, and with it the match, was clinched when Alberts overcame a 3 to 2 handicap and defeated Columbia's Norman Blackman, 5 to 2. Wright vanquished all three of his opponents...
Except for Thomas' bout, the four crucial fights ended up in Yale hands. Jim Redmon was forced to yield a decision to powerful Brooks Parker of Yale, in the 128-pound slot. Ray Stone held out against a more experienced adversary for 8:12, but was finally thrown, while 165-pound John Page fared only slightly better and kept his opponent down to a referee's decision...
...best bout of the afternoon should be in the 128-pound class, when Jim Redmon takes on Bob Eberle, the Princeton captain. Eberle, twice winner of the Easterns, just edged out Redmon last year, but Jim's style has improved considerably this season, and be should give the invader a run for his money...
...fencers did not acknowledge defeat until the last match. They led 6 to 3 in the foils, but Loomis quickly tied the score in the epee. The standing of the two teams stood at 13 to 13 until John Hobson of Loomis defeated Harold Cooledge in the final saber bout...
...Burns and Pete Sax fall within the 175-pound bracket. Dug has wrestled in every meet so far, and has lost his bout in only one. Heavyweights Howle Gleason, Doug DeCoster, Dave Vaughan, Bob Burns, and John Corrigan are the present rivals for the top group. Glesson and DeCoster have wrestled in two meets apiece, while 175-pound Pete Sax has fought one scrap for the heavies...