Word: sextets
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...first match of the season, which was also a league match, took place on May 4 at Greenwich, Conn., a sextet of Princeton golfers being the University opponents. The Orange and Black after winning three of the twosome matches, each by one stroke, clinched the victory by winning two foursomes and took the match, 5 to 4. The same sextet of University golfers which played throughout the season took place in this match. In this match as well as in all the following, C. L. Peirson '25 and Clark Hodder '25 each played excellent golf for the University while contesting...
...foursomes, the University golf team triumphed over the Williams links men by the score of 7 to 2 at Belmont Spring Country Club, Saturday afternoon. The University golfers played better golf as a team than their opponents although Ward, playing number one on the Purple sextet, was the individual star of the day, completing the 18 holes in a 73, missing par by one stroke, and defeating Clark Hodder '25, number 1 on the University team...
...team will meet the undefeated Dartmouth golfers on the links of the Woodland Golf Club in Auburndale at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Six single matches and three best-ball four-somes will be played. With the exception of the first and second positions on the team the Crimson sextet will line up as in the prevous league matches...
...Springs Country Club than C. L. Peirson '25, who will play number two in today's match. The number three position on the team will be filled by J. J. Mapes '25 with Captain D. A. Williams '23, R. M. Clough '24, and W. G. Soule '25 completing the sextet in that order...
...tangling the Swinburnian idea in a mass of involved constructions. Mr. Cozzens's "Two Arts" is a tar more competent piece of work, exhibiting the lyric smoothness we demand of modern sonneteers: it is unfortunate, however, that he had to employ a combination of two weak rhymes in his sextet. In his limpid classic fragment called "Separation", Mr. James Sherry Mangau gives us the poignant sensations of a lover deploring the absence of his Hawatian princess, whose sonorous name appropriately terminates the simple lyric...