Word: stewart
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...which Norman M. Hinerfeld '51, Melvin L. Zurier '50, and Richard D. Rohr '50, will take the negative, will be held in the Winthrop Junior Common Room at 8 p.m. and will be broadcast by the Crimson Network. William C. Becker '51, Richard W. Hulbert '51, and Richard S. Stewart '50 will uphold the affirmative at New Haven...
...Debate Council will travel to Worcester today to meet a Holy Cross debating team on the subject of "Resolved, That Communists be barred from teaching positions in colleges." Presenting the affirmative for the Harvard group are Richard W. Hulbert '51, William C. Becker '51, and Richard S. Stewart...
Four juniors and two seniors were picked today in tryouts for a Yale debate to be held on December 2. The winners were William C. Becker '51, Norman M. Hinerfeld '51, Richard W. Hulbert '51, Richard D. Rohr '50, Richard S. Stewart '51, and Melvin L. Zurier...
Over at the rival New Orleans States (circ. 96,228), anguished City Editor Walter Cowan called Society Editor Eva Stewart on the carpet. She had heard about the story, but had not gotten around to checking up on the prince. Cowan decided that it was not too late to start...
Latter-day Harvard coaches who introduced new plays for the Yale game had nothing on co-mentors Stewart and Lake, who, in 1893, outfitted their charges in shiny leather suits. One of the main reasons for the suits was said to lesson the weight a player would have to carry in case of rain, but all sorts of dubious motives were ascribed to the Harvards. The opposing captains waged a bitter arguments before the game as to the legality of the suits but the officials could find nothing in the rule book against wearing them so the game went...