Word: cheeringly
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Delegates will pay $2 apiece to attend a banquet in Eliot House and hear a speech on "Making Both Ends Meet Under the Present Conditions." Meanwhile, outdoors, the great searchlights on Harvard's four house-towers will light the sky. Bright prismatic beams will cheer the unemployed and guide stray geese going South...
...Stanford's football songs are sung to the tunes of "Our Director" and "Up the Street." Director G. V. Slade '32, plans to execute an S U for Stanford and then to repeat last years' welcome to Dartmouth by spelling out Wah Hoo Wah in imitation of their famous cheer...
...rear posing ground for pictures. In his soft hand he gingerly balanced a brand new football, marked '94. Then he went back to his office- "probably to count the gate receipts," jibed one old footballer. Because he was a good Hoover friend and biographer and onetime Stanford cheer leader, Will Irwin was invited to the reunion. He waved his arms excitedly while the teammates rah-rahed mildly for Stanford. Then on the lawn the players crouched in their oldtime positions and, with "Bill" Harrelson calling the half-forgotten signals at quarter, went through several phantom formations. One drop-kick...
...regular fellows" by their classmates. In Princeton's Class of 1920, however, was a Canadian preacher's son whose popularity was immense, yet who surprised few of his friends when he was converted to "Buchmanism" the spring of his senior year. Erdman ("Erd") Harris was an exuberant cheer leader, a powerful swimmer, a talented composer of Triangle Club scores (Julius Caesar, Isle of Surprise). He ranked high in studies, too. His bright, bubbling nature continued as engaging after conversion as before and his post-graduate religious work on the campus was extremely successful, except among the few students...
...times an uninspired field-general, Harvard's captain has taken longer than it took Booth to achieve the status of a No. i college football hero. But now his fame and popularity are such that even the South Boston "townies," whose custom it has long been to cheer for Harvard's opponents, fill the bowl end of Soldiers Field to whoop for Harvard. Even Boston and Cambridge police are on Harvard's side...