Word: drews
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Under Lamar's guiding hand, intercollegiate boxing became successful and immensely popular at Harvard. A bout between Harvard and the U.S. Military Academy in 1936 drew an estimated 3000 enthusiasts, the largest crowd ever to attend an athletic event in the Indoor Athletic Building...
Even in the third period, Harvard dominated the play only because the Wildcats drew six penalties which kept them on the defensive for most of the period...
Mike Slutzger lost at 152 and Bart Harvey drew at 160 to give Yale and 11-6 edge, but Harvard's upper weight wrestlers took advantage of the rest Lee gave them and swept the remaining matches...
...Statesman from 1931 to 1960, whose radical views helped shape Labor Party policy and colored the entire fabric of British politics; of a stroke; in Cairo. When Martin came to the New Statesman, it was an insignificant left-wing weekly with a small readership and less clout. Martin drew his Fabian Society friends (G. B. Shaw, H. G. Wells) to the pages of the magazine, made it Britain's foremost intellectual forum, increased circulation to 80,000. His own influential column, "London Diary," was Utopian in thrust, often whimsical in tone, and maddening to the government. Though radicals rallied...
...resolution, introduced by Councillor Barbara W. Ackermann, drew the support of professors from M.I.T. and Harvard. Chester Hartman, assistant professor for City Planning and a member of the Joint Center for Urban Studies, told the Council that the system would make a target of Cambridge in any war where it otherwise might not be. He also cited the growing needs of the cities for federal funds, and said that the $5-6 billion estimated cost of the ABM would drain cities of needed funds...