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...Dudley House and Belmont, drill master; Wayne S. Barry '69 of Eliot House and Wilmette, III. Also approved assistant managers, Joseph Field '69 of Leverett House and Weston; William C. Horne '69 of Leverett House and Beverly; S. Kent Rawson '69 of Leverett House and Topeka, Kansas; Michael S. Schooler '69 of Lowell House and Rochester, N.Y.; and Robert D. Whittemore '69 of Leverett House and New York...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Finley to Head Band; Grimes Will Conduct | 2/21/1967 | See Source »

Chris Pardee, who high-jumped for Harvard last year and who now attends Oxford, placed third in the jump behind Olympian John Thomas and high-schooler Stanley Albright. The winning height was 7 ft. Pardee, now on vacation, cleared...

Author: By James K. Glassman, | Title: Relay Snaps Record | 1/17/1967 | See Source »

...decathlon made Jim Thorpe the most famous American Indian since Sitting Bull. It won Glenn Morris a job playing Tarzan in the movies. It turned Bob Mathias, a 17-year-old high-schooler, into a national hero, and it earned a college education for a Negro lad named Rafer Johnson whose family were so poor that they lived in a boxcar on a railroad siding. The only thing the two-day, ten-event contest has done for California's Bill Toomey, 27, and Russ Hodge, 26, is run up their doctors' bills. Bill suffers from shin splints...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Track & Field: What Price What Glory? | 8/5/1966 | See Source »

...Kansas' Jim Ryun, 18: a 3-min. 58.3-sec. mile, fastest ever run by a high-schooler and only 4.2 sec. off the world record held by New Zealand's Peter Snell; in a meet at Wichita. Passing the three-quarter-mile mark in 3 min. 2 sec. Ryun sprinted the last quarter in 56.3 sec., clipped 3.7 sec. off his own high school record set last month...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Scoreboard: Who Won may 21, 1965 | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

...gawking drivers on the nearby freeway. One is a 12-ft. gallows with the 13 steps and a hanging effigy, its neck snapped at a medically correct angle. Another is a dinosaur and pterodactyl combination well planted in the muck. Last week a 17-year-old high-schooler named Wayne Saxton finished his fifth dereliction - a mammoth Viking warrior standing almost 20 ft. high. "I like Vikings," said he, as if that explained everything...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sculpture: Mud-Flat Museum | 8/28/1964 | See Source »

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