Word: two
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Sweepswingers of the first two University eights, Coach Brown, managers, waiters, launch drivers and various camp attaches will leave Boston at 3 o'clock tomorrow afternoon as the vanguard of the Harvard crew squad entrains for its quarters at Red Top, Connecticut...
...quarters, first building in the new group on the Thames to be completed. Plans as released yesterday call for no work-out tomorrow evening but the shells have already been shipped to the Nutmeg State quarters and will be ready for service Monday morning. For the time being only two Harvard launches will be in use. The "Black Pup" goes down today over the railroad and the "Patricia" is now making the journey via the water route...
...fact that Ingraham won all but one of his doubles matches is an evidence of the tennis strategy which made this year's season so successful. Meeting the strong-Eastern teams, Columbia, N. Y. U., Penn, Williams, and Yale, Harvard would usually lose two or three of the singles matches to the luminaries of the opposing team, Yale's Ryan and Luce, Penn's Stanger and Lavine, William's Wolf and Chase, N. Y. U.'s Harte and Tarangoli as the case might be. But meeting the same men paired in the doubles matches, the Harvard team would come back...
...former anomalous relation of the two institutions was clarified by President Eliot in a letter of May 29, 1893. In effect, the president and fellows of Harvard University agreed that the institute founded by the society should have a name--"X College"; that they should be the visitors of X College, and that the president should countersign the diplomas of X College, which should also bear the Harvard seal, to testify to the equivalence of the degrees granted by the two institutions. Other rights were also granted by Harvard. Then in June, 1893, President Eliot suggested for the name...
...fourth and funds, including scholarships, of less than $500,000. He immediately addressed himself to the financial needs. First came a library; then a dormitory to stand next to Bertram Hall in the new quadrangle on Shepard Street. By 1908 these were built and in use; by 1914 two other dormitories were built and occupied. After the war Dean Briggs undertook to add $1,000,000 to the college endowment, and at his last commencement as president, in 1923, he announced the success of the campaign...