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Paced by the perfect performances of Elaine Fraser and Arthur Cantor in a Harvard-Radcliffe team of six men and two women yesterday outspelled a similarly composed Oxford aggregation in a radio bee broadcast over WBZ and BBC.
With the scene tried at 18 all going its the fourth of five rounds, the match was to the locals an brilliant American compositions coupled themselves aid a sudden British collapse.
Meanwhile Oxford only picked up as points. The Britishers seemed to a displaying a less serious altitude on to whole. The flippancy of their cleanup man. The Right Bon. Earl of Asquith, and the general inability of their number three, identified as John Irwins, a former Princetonian, proved particularly costly.
Starring for the Stars and Stripes were in addition in Miss Fraser and Cantor: Norma Naismith, Arthur L. Racine '35, A. W. G. Kean 3L and Sumner F. Turetzky '40. Also participating were Malcolmn D. Perkins 2L, and Morris Earle '38 who shared five of the nine American miscues.
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Canter, Racine, and Turetzky are veterans in the spelling game. Winner this year, Cantor says he went down in last year's big been on finial. Kean is an Englishman. The Radcliffe representatives lived up to their advance reputation. The American women handed the spelling order, while the English lasses both bulwarks for Albion, came last.
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