Word: winners
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...epee is the team's strongest weapon. Sophomore Mark Irvings, who has been Harvard's most consistent winner this season, gives the team reliable strength in the epee. John Reitz, another strong epee fencer, could combine with Irvings to take first and second against Rutgers...
Sophomores Alan Watson, Larry Carter and O'Rear led the Crimson assault by finishing third, fifth and eighth respectively. Watson's time was only three-tenths of a second behind the winner, Paul Reed of Middlebury, while Carter trailed the winning time an additional one-tenth second...
Harvard narrowly missed victories in the 200 freestyle and 200 butterfly which could have radically changed the score. Only three-tenths of a second separated Tobin Gerhart and Dave Powlison from Princeton's Tom Garretson, winner of the 200 freestyle. In the 200 fly, Crimson swimmer John Monk put in his best time of the year and just missed upsetting nationally ranked Ross Wales...
...other raffle, of entire girls, "was not organized to titillate," Diorita C. Fletcher '71, president of East House, said. The seven winners of the raffle, who paid 25 cents per ticket, were greeted with a smile and a cup cake. "It's fraud!" cried one dejected winner. "I didn't even get a kiss," he said. The cupcakes were selling earlier for ten cents...
Harvard's number two man, Larry Terrell, is probably the second best collegian in the country behind Nayar and is a likely winner this weekend. Harvard is thus almost guaranteed the first two matches, and must win three of the seven other contests to earn victory...