Word: greenes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...pound class Sophomore Bill Daughaday has great potentialities to become some day the Crimson's major threat. Yet somewhat green, Daughaday is well built and has developed an efficient technique. His record is not impressive although he won his first four matches over weak opponents. Because he put up a stiff fight against Navy and Penn and also against Charlie Powers of Princeton, observers are predicting he will do well in the Eastern events...
When the last place Tiger Quintet completely upset the pregame dope by trouncing the apparently over confident league leading Dartmouth Indians Monday, the basketball title race was once more thrown open. Both Harvard and Pennsylvania are mathematically conceded a chance of ticing the Big Green for the lead, while the Crimson by winning all its remaining encounters can pass the Indians and grab off the title...
...Lowell sharpshooters will face the winner of a play-off between the champions of the inter-fraternity and inter-dormitory circuits; the pugllists, a corresponding Green all-star aggregation. Coach Lamar will pick his team later this week...
...sort of thing had been done before and better by the Europeans who originated it. A few temperate and tolerably fresh efforts were, nevertheless, visible. One was an Indian Concretion (see cut) by tall, silent, Socialite George L. K. Morris, whose inspiration for this pattern of rose, purple, black, green and orange forms came from objects in the Museum of the American Indian. Thoughtful critics believe that simple designs of this character hold the most promise for abstract art in the U. S. To the artist an abstraction may be either child's play with pretty shapes...
Last week, accompanied by 11-year-old Ann Gillis, a green-eyed, red-haired veteran of eleven pictures, Tommy was back in Manhattan. Together the pair had curtsied to the press, spoken over the radio, journeyed to Elmira, N. Y. to lay a wreath on Mark Twain's grave. Back home, Tommy sighed, "Give me The Bronx any time." But The Bronx was not the same: the fan mail was already starting to come in. Wrote one: "I heard you on the radio last night and I am looking forward to seeing your picture very much. It was very...