Word: tigers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...color). The favorite subjects of the Scythians were animals, and few civilizations created an animal kingdom with a more graceful sense of fantasy. A boar's mane is not just so much wild and scraggly hair, but a crescent of curls to be worn like a crown. A tiger's body is as supple as an accordion: every muscle, every rib, every stripe is there. A deer, though kneeling, seems to be darting through the air while its antlers ripple and bend like plumes. This quivering creature defies and submits at the same time, as if knowing that...
...King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band) that ruled the North and South Sides in the old days. Put on wax in the early '20s, these performances are a reminder that the King of the Kings was the late Clarinetist Leon Rappolo, whose solos in such numbers as Tiger Rag and the title song (also known as Jazzin' Babies) are taut as a bent...
Fighting a persistent drizzle and a troublesome headwind, the varsity jumped to an early lead in the feature race and and was far enough ahead going into the turn to keep a few seats on the Tiger shell, overcoming the disadvantage of being in the outside lane around the bend...
Last year's Harvard-Princeton match was rained out and since almost no one remains from the 1959 Tiger squad, it is difficult to compare past performances. Princeton's number two man, Captain Tom Richardson, lost to Bob Bowditch in two easy sets while playing in the same position two years...
...third singles, the Crimson's Doug Walter, an unbeaten sophomore, will play Dick Baldwin, while captain Pete Smith meets Tiger junior Dick Williams at number four. Keith Martin and Gary Adelman will oppose Princeton's Tony Thompson and Harold German at fifth and sixth singles, respectively...