Word: 102nd
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Crimson squad is now pointed to ward the high spot of the indoor track season, the I. C. A. A. A. A., to be held next Saturday night in the 102nd Engineers Regiment Armory, New York. As a result of their showing last Saturday night, the Crimson runners are conceded at least an even chance to carry off the national honors against the strong Georgetown champions and the Yale squad...
Georgetown, Pennsylvania, Harvard, Yale and Cornell--any one of these may win the fourth annual indoor games of the I. C. A. A. A. A. which will be held in the 102nd Engineers Armory in New York City this evening. The general concensus of opinion predicts that the colleges will rank in the above order at the end of the meet...
...University track team will send 28 men to the Intercollegiate Indoor Track Meet to be held Saturday in the 102nd Engineers Armory, New York City. Twenty-two colleges, including Princeton and Yale, have entered 820 athletes. Because of the University victory in the triangular meet last Saturday, local sports writers are favoring the Crimson team to win. This opinion is not shared by track authorities outside Boston. Certainly the Crimson team will meet great opposition in a competition for which Coach Farrell has not pointed...
...tradition that Wall Street men die young is hardly borne out by John A. Stewart, Chairman of the Board of the United States Trust Co. On Aug. 26, Banker Stewart celebrated his 102nd birthday. Until three years ago, he came to his office three times a week to presideat board meetings; although not now active in the affairs of his bank, he still retains the Chairmanship and very fair health. He is the oldest bank official...
...Frank A. Vanderlip decided to give a Japanese garden party at Beechwood, Scarborough-on-the- Hudson, for the benefit of Tsuda College, destroyed by the Japanese earthquake. They wanted to invite Secretary Hughes and Ambassador Hani-hara. So they martialed a flock of carrier pigeons and the 102nd Aviation Squadron of the National Guard at Staten Island, to deliver a message to each of these distinguished diplomats. Lieutenant J. Kendrick, of the Aviation Squadron, was equipped with a Curtiss plane-familiarly known as a "Jenny," powered with a 100-horsepower engine and capable of 70 to 75 miles an hour...