Word: tanbarks
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Facing the Princeton polo team for the first time since 1926, the Harvard riders will open their intercollegiate season at the Commonwealth Armory tomorrow night, inspired by possession of a string of well-earned victories in the Boston Indoor League. The game on the Armory tanbark will start at 8.30 o'clock, and should see a favored Harvard trio give the invading Princeton malletmen a taste of the hard and fast polo which the Crimson riders have been displaying since December...
...point handicap gave Harvard a good start. The furious onslaught of the Cavairy in the last chukker resulted in the two deciding goals which gave them the trophy honors. This was the Crimson's last league game of the season, but it will continue to perform on the Armory tanbark in intercollegiate contests, starting with the Princeton tilt next week, the first polo game with the Tiger since...
...Harvard riders meet a Westwood aggregation of polo players on the Commonwealth Armory tanbark tomorrow night, in their fourth game of the season. The hard-riding opposition receives additional strength from the presence of Captain F. D. Sharp, the Harvard coach, who plays with a sting which is uncommon in indoor polo. It is hoped that L. S. Dillingham '34, star first line player who has been laid up the last few weeks will see action next week, when the malletmen face the 110th Cavalry...
...year-old, eight-goal Manuel Andrada at back. Cokey Rathborne, Jimmy Mills, Stewart Iglehart and Elbridge Gerry have called themselves the Old Aiken team for the last four or live seasons. They have been playing together on fields at Aiken. Westbury, Harvard and Yale and on the tanbark of Manhattan armories for the last eleven years. They averaged 30 Ib. lighter, but 15 years younger than the Argentines. . In the first match, with 4,000 excited socialites craning on the sidelines, slim Ebby Gerry flashed through the Argentine defense to score seven goals. One goal he made after the head...
Privilege Car. The scene of this play is laid in the lunch counter of a circus train; the characters are all circus folk. Authors are Willard Keefe (Celebrity) and Edward J. Foran, longtime follower of the tanbark trail. Like any circus, their lively melodramatic comedy contains such a plethora of activity that even the most interested customer is unable to take it all in at once. The Colton & Steel tent show may be going broke, but it is certainly not stagnating...