Word: thursday
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...most famous sections of a famous course, History 7, is that on the Hapsburg Valois wars. In the absence at Paris of Professor Merriman, it will be begun today at 11 o'clock in Emerson J by Professor Whitney. He will take the same theme on Tuesday and Thursday of next week. These three lectures will be of particular value to the Senior who faces divisionals in History, but since no vagabond ever got as far as divisionals, I may go downstairs instead to hear Professor Ripley in Emerson D. He is to talk in Economics 4b on modern tendencies...
...Thursday. Dreamed I was playing Lenglen. My arm was paralyzed. I couldn't lift my racquet, and her shots came as fast as bullets from a machine-gun. They fell all around me with monotonous little explosions, tum-tat-tat-tum. ... It was rain on the roof. . . . No tennis today, I thought, and went to sleep again till 11 o'clock. . . . Some minx started the rumor that Patou had given me $1,000 worth of clothes. When reporters asked him about it he said: "You know I never gave anything away in my life." A good friend...
...Thursday. Two set-ups in the singles today. In the morning the sun made me feel so well I simply couldn't bear to concentrate, but in the afternoon it turned raw. Lillie Cadle (British) was playing against me. I wanted to get it over quickly and played as hard as I could. She took three games in the second set. Critics said that I was better in this match than in any other here so far. . . . Suzanne Lenglen said that "circumstances over which she had no control might prevent her meeting me in the tournament at Nice." Well...
Faculty telegraph service due to storm conditions was the cause of the errosous statement that Watters and Burns failed to place in their respective events Thursday. They were caught in Provdence in the clutches of the storm, and returned to Cambridge without competing...
...Wright '26, number one on the Crimson squad was forced to five games in winning his first match from H. C. Grafton of the Union Boat Club last Thursday and will meet Arthur Cross of the Weston Club next Monday. The first member of the University quintet to take part in the competition for the state title was H. N. Rawlins '27, number three on the Crimson squad, who advanced the first two rounds of the tournament with easy wins. He will clash with G. N. Hued of the Milton Club in his next match...