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Word: sextet (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...first meeting for 1933 hockey candidates is to be held today at 5.30 o'clock in the Smith Halls common room. L. O. Pratt '26, the newly appointed Freshman hockey coach, will be on hand to give a short talk. Pratt was defense star on the 1926 Harvard sextet and ended his college career in the victory over Yale that year in the Madison Square Garden. Last year he played with other former Crimson stars on the University Club sextet. Coach Joseph Stubbs and Captain E. T. Putnam ocC will also address the candidates...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRATT SUMMONS FIRST YEAR HOCKEY PLAYERS | 12/16/1929 | See Source »

...experiment with a first team before the initial test of the season against Boston University on December 18. The sessions up until now have been for the most part experimental practices during which Coach Stubbs considered each man individually. Starting today however he will begin to select the sextet that will represent the Crimson on the ice this fall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HOCKEY SQUAD CUT TO TWENTY-THREE BY COACH STUBBS | 12/6/1929 | See Source »

...remaining members of the squad include men who failed to make their letter last year and some last year's second team men. This number is, made up of Harwood Ellis '31, star goalie of the 1931 sextet, M. H. Hale, Jr. '32, Sumner Putnam '31, H. D. Everett '31, T. W. Hallowell '31, F. A. Harding '31, F. A. Martin '32, C. E. McGregor, Jr. '32, R. S. Ogden '31 and F. M. Pruyn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HOCKEY SQUAD CUT TO TWENTY-THREE BY COACH STUBBS | 12/6/1929 | See Source »

Harvard's backfield has practically expanded from a quartet into a sextet, because May and White, the two men who top the Crimson reserve strength, can practically he practically as members of the regular four it is certain that they will see considerable action in today's game, thus giving Harvard an all-Sophomore backfield Wood, the general of the Crimson team and the principal cog in Harvard's now feared and famous aerial offense, will have the attention of the crowd focused on him. Since he was given his chance against Army the cool headed Sophomore has, because...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BEST PURPLE TEAM IN YEARS OPPOSES CRIMSON COHORTS | 11/16/1929 | See Source »

Somebody heard little Walter Winchell sing in a Harlem cinema house when he was 13, found him a sing-song job in Gus Edwards' Newsboy Sextet. That year, "incorrigible," "stupid," he quit school. Soon he was touring with a "gel," applauded by a few and egged by many as he hoofed and sang. As his voice grew deeper, his singing grew worse. After being laid off, in Durham. N. C., he fed chickens on a boxcar to get back to Manhattan. During the War he was Sailor Winchell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Turn to the Mirror | 6/17/1929 | See Source »

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