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Squash Team's 30-Match Win Streak At Stake in Match with McGill Today

At number one this season is Romer Holleran, a top player as long ago as 1961, who spent several years away from school and returned to Harvard last spring. He became eligible in March and played a match or two in the number two position after Williams broke a wrist.

Holleran led a Crimson team in to the quarterfinals of the national championships. He also got to the semifinals of the collegiate singles championships before losing to Tom Poor of Amherst by one point in the fifth game. This year he already boasts a win over Dick Hoehn, a former Dartmouth number one player and one of the best in the Boston area.

Fighting for the second spot behind Holleran are Ed Robinson and Bill Morris, both two-year lettermen, both veterans of the five-man Crimson team that won the national title two years ago. Over Princeton captain Toby Symington in the 5-4 win over the Tigers. Morris fluctuated between two and four, and also had a big win against Princeton. Dinny Adams, the junior who now holds down the number four spot, had the most amazing season of all last year. Until his final match he was not only undefeated at number eight, but had won every match by 3-0 scores before he lost a game to his Yale opponent.

Adams has moved ahead of A1 Terrell, a senior who played above him last year, since Terrell hasn't played at all this fall and Adams got an early start.

Terrel Won Some

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But Terrell can be expected to have a good season; he turned in several spectacular wins last year, particularly in the early season.

Pressing the veterans is junior Dave Benjamin, the Crimson's number one tennis player and another non-squash player before he came to Harvard. Benjamin won a round-robin tournament for the number six spot over Peter Brooks, who saw enough action in spots last year to win a letter.

At number eight will be Tod Wilkinson, a tall junior and another converted tennis player. The last spot on the team could go to Craig Stapleton, last year's top freshman, or to Matt Hall, another sophomore, or to senior Denny Lewis.

Grad Student Plays

There isn't much experience in that bottom foursome, and McGill should give them a tough test this year. Last year the Crimson trampled them 9-0, but two years ago it was a much closer 6-3 match. To dampen any faint hopes of a runaway, Morris will be playing in a tournament in New York this weekend instead of going to Montreal.

Under Canadian rules, graduate students as well as undergraduates are eligible; everyone on the McGill team has experience. If the bottom four crumple and the match is close, it will be an indication that Harvard is in for a rare rough year. If they break even, they can be expected to improve and the season can be expected to be good. If the match turns out to be a runaway after all, Princeton can look out.

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