Word: wood
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Below Bowditch, the present singles alignment has junior Tim Gallwey, whom Bowditch beat in a test match during the spring vacation trip at number two, with Weld playing third. Junior Fred Vinton is at fourth singles and pairs with Gallwey at second doubles. Lemann and senior Bill Wood, the sixth singles man, make up the third doubles pair...
...lost. In the middle of the night of Jan.24, 1764, Harvard Hall burned to the ground. The Massachusetts Great and General Court, driven out of Boston by a small pox epidemic, was occupying the halls of Harvard for its mid-winter sessions. Apparently one member piled open fire wood to high and it eventually caught fire...
...edged junior Tim Gallwey out for the number one singles slot. Neither of them did particularly well on the trip, but Barnaby expects an improved showing with more work. Captain Ned Weld occupies the third position, with junior Fred Vinton at number four, Sohpomore Jorge Lemann and junior Bill Wood round...
...cleared up considerably. The newly formed combination of Weld and Bowditch is improving steadily, and came very close to winning at number one against Presbyterian. They beat out last year's second pair of Gallwey and Vinton in a special match at Clinton last Tuesday. Lemann and Wood, at number three, looked quite good, although playing against weak opposition...
Born the son of a German wood carver in Manhattan's Greenwich Village in 1862, young Maybeck made his way to Paris, studied at the Beaux Arts, developed a deep and abiding love for all the great traditional styles. He treated them as a huge treasure-trove, to be dipped into as the artist's imagination dictated. He returned to the U.S. and moved to San Francisco, where he founded the University of California's architectural department...