Writer
R. SCOT Leavitt
Latest Content
Weatherman Dampens 'Big Red' Game's Hopes
There probably will not be a baseball game at Soldiers Field this afternoon. If there is--a doubtful proposition, since the
Sextet Finishes With Blues Today; 85 Football Candidates Open Drills
Jaakko Mikkola's runners ran circles around Art Valpey's football squad for two hours yesterday, but when the gazelles had departed
Mather, Barnes Wrangle Over H220 Before Overflow New Lecture Crowd
Jammed into New Lecture Hall to hear a debate on the Barnes Bill, close to 1,000 persons roared, stamped, and
Pretty Girls, Gendarmes Alert for Big Weekend
New Haven was a quiet city last night, but a city obviously ready to burst at the seams momentarily, as
Hustling Grid Practice Hits Pass Defense
Twelve grinding weeks of practice, and eight full-scale games had enough effect on the 40-odd footballers yesterday afternoon for Coach
Stadium Affray Is Death Knell Of Enchantment
It was something like the Thurbor cartoon: "Well I'm disenchanted too, we're all disenchanted." The disembowelment of hard-to-kill illusions was
Yale Squelches Crimson on Diamond, 9-3
Yale heightened its chances of winning the Eastern Intercollegiate League baseball championship to the intense disappointment of 4500 Alumni at
Crew to Face Princeton, M.I.T. on Charles Today
When Tom Bolles sends his Varsity eight to the starting line against Princeton and M.I.T. at 5:30 o'clock this afternoon,
Meeting Tonight May Decide Fate Of 'Advocate,' Defunct Since 1943
A few of the difficulties that have left the College without a literary magazine may be cleared this evening when
Lining Them Up
If Tom Bolles is worrying about anything these days, it isn't about filling his Varsity boat when the time comes
Harvardevens, Livable but Expensive, Shapes Up as Real Community
Harvardevens Village, the spanking new home for 400 students and their families, isn't an overstuffed cherry bowl. Nor is, it
Sports of the Crimson
There's a lot of difference between the spoken and the written word, and if you don't believe it go listen
Stassen Straddles Partisan Sides Of All Controversies
Harold E. Stassen, three-term governor of Minnesota, now wearing a gold duck in his lapel after three years as a
STAHLMEN TO ENTER BUSIEST WEEKEND; CREW TAKES ON PENN, NAVY, CORNELL
If the Varsity eight can get away with a first on the Schuylkill tomorrow it will have put away for
HARVARD SWEEPS RIVER DESPITE POWER OF M.I.T.
Five sleek Crimson shells did business as usual with M. I. T. last Saturday. But the five victories that were