Word: douglis
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...stories are all worth reading. Top honors go equally to Curtis Thomas's "Ascent" and Doug Woolf's "The Knifeman." Both are compact, sensitively chiselled pieces of work, relaying on restraint and carefully prepared surprise for their effects. Thomas accomplishes the feat of writing a fantasy in a realistic style. A too conscious attempt at atmosphere occasionally swamps Albert Friedman's "Carnival," while David Hessey's "Launching" sacrifices a powerful theme to occasionally slip-shod treatment. Cecil Schneer makes a heroic attempt to get inside a converted isolationist by reducing him through pain to his Freudian common denominator...
...Doug Thompson, goalie; Bud Killam, left fullback; Bob Harbison, right fullback; George Mallory, left halfback; Jack Clarke, center halfback; Ward Slingerland, right halfback; Eli Berman, left outside; Capt. Dick Gifford, left inside; Henry Murphy, center forward; Thayer Drake, right inside; Jack Calhoun, right outside...
...lineup as it will hold, Coach Jim MacDonald will start six Seniors against a Medford aggregation that boasts eight three-year men. In addition, all but one of the starting Crimson legmen has Varsity experience behind him, the one exception occurring at the vital goalie post, where Sophomore Doug Thompson will hold forth. Thompson, captain of last year's successful Yardling team, won the job with little trouble this year and will take the chief role in the Crimson defense this afternoon...
Honors in the sprints this summer have been split three ways. Frank Coolidge has been rated as one of the best of the Crimson sprinters and a consistent 10 second man. Those in the know have even begun rating him with Doug Pirnie, one of the best Crimson sprinters of all times. Up there with the best of them, however, has been Sophomore Moe Young, who hasn't yet had a chance to show his stuff in an official meet. Last of the sprinting trio which has monopolized the meets this summer is Wes Flint...
Looking over the entries for the 100, the name of Frank Coolidge is perhaps foremost. Coolidge has been a consistent 10 second man, with low time of 9.8 seconds, and from his record last spring the experts are already ranking him with Doug Pirnie of the Class of '43 as one of the best Harvard sprinters of all time...