Word: dicks
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Bill Bingham and Dick Harlow and the Harvard ideal of teams composed of men who are primarily students and athletes afterward have received their share of fully merited praise from a wildly happy college. The Harvard system of subordinating athletics has been fully vindicated. But in all the post-game delirium there is one group whose part in the great victory is, because of its obvious magnitude, apt to be overlooked...
After the game Dick Harlow said that he would have liked to have given more letters, but added that "our first debt is to Harvard football. We needed our strongest defensive combination up to the closing whistle...
Anybody who mounted this stand was addressing his remarks ultimately to one man, Bill Bingham. Bill Bingham had for all only one answer, No! In January, 1935, came the news of the appointment of Dick Harlow. The uninformed, not knowing much about Harlow at that time, raised their eyebrows. On January 7, the Crimson joined others in open doubting Bill Bingham's sincerity. The athletic director had only one answer, a thousand times...
...Bill Bingham and Dick Harlow, who has cooperated with his chief in every way, all honor and praise. Harvard athletic contests have been played in the past by men who were primarily students and incidentally athletes, they are so played today, and they must and shall continue to be so played...
Hotly contested is a place in the 145-1b. division between Ed. Barnes '38, Arthur Page '40, and Dick Lindenfelser 38. The latter represented the Crimson in several matches last year, has suffered his share of setbacks. But Page, unbeaten as a Freshman and a tricky, strong-armed player, and Barnes, who will stage a comeback after two years on the sidelines, are almost certain to unseat the '37 grappler...