Word: tennised
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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The varsity tennis team had to play only two-thirds of a match yesterday to gain its eighteenth win of the year. Rain halted the Crimson's contest with Penn after the six singles had been completed, and since Harvard had won five of the six, enough to sew up...
William T. Gallwey '60, of Straus Hall and San Francisco, has been elected captain of the freshman tennis team. Gallwey plays number one singles on the undefeated Yardling squad. He was Eastern Interscholastic singles champion last year at St. George's School. As a junior player Gallwey ranked seventh in...
The varsity tennis team journeys to Philadelphia this morning to oppose a weak Penn team in the Crimson's final match before the Yale encounter. The match will be of very little consequence to the varsity and should do no more than provide practice for Thursday's meeting with the...
Windbreakers would not cure Harvard tennis, but they would be a step to help a seemingly hopeless disease: there are too few courts; there are no clay courts for everyone's use. The teams, about one one hundred-fiftieth of Harvard, alone can touch a Harvard clay court, and Leverett...
After wind, the most important item is probably clay, so that following the building of any windbreaks, Harvard would do well to cover at least one bank of the discouraging tennis lands with a clay surface instead of the present hard top that kills sneakers, tennis balls, bounces, and enthusiasm...