Word: lenhart
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...matches. The team again won the state championship and safely defended its national title. W. P. Dixon '25 again won the national individual squash crown, but this time he did not represent Harvard. The team was composed of: Captain G. D. Debevoise '26, L. S. Haskins '26, P. M. Lenhart '27, H. N. Rawlins '27, R. S. Wright '26, and Manager G. H. Perkins...
With the exception of Assistant Manager L. H. Gordon '27, H. N. Rawlins '27, and P. M. Lenhart '27, who will leave tonight, the state championship University squad entrained for Washington, D. C. last night, to enter the national team championship tournament. Coach Harry Cowles, Captain G. D. Debevoise '26, R. S. Wright '26, L. S. Haskins '26, and T. T. Jansen '26 are the members of the team who left Cambridge last night and will arrive at the Racquet Club of Washington, D. C., this morning where the matches will be played. The Crimson racquet wielders will stay...
...semi-final match in the upper half of the University tournament between Wright and Rawlins has been postponed until the player have completed the competition in the state individual tournament. The winner will meet L. S. Haskins '26, who defeated P. M. Lenhart '27, in the other semi-final contest after coming from behind to overcome a large lead. The coming fight for the final berth promises to be the most interesting as well as the closest of the tournament. The Crimson lead off player is a smashing, hard hitting performer...
...University tournament , which is drawing to a close, L.S. Haskins '26 sprang the second surprise of the competition when he came from behind to take a five game match from P.M. Lenhart '27 for a place in the finals. The winner is the last man on the University team while Lenhart ranks above him in fourth position. In the upper bracket R.S. Wright '26 and R.N. Rawlins '27 will clash some time next week for the right to meet Haskins for the University crown...
...early in the tournament by defeating Captain G. D. Debevoise '26. The winner after dropping the first game to his opponent, was trailing by several points in the second contest, when he hit his stride and came from behind with a rush to win the second and third games. Lenhart had little difficulty in taking the measure of J. D. Dubois 2L, when the loser attempted to play Lenhart's own style, a soft game...