Word: ever
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Cornell nine, which will play Harvard at Cambridge on May 30, has shown promise during the season of being one of the best that has ever represented Cornell, although there have been one or two serious slumps in the playing. During the southern trip the work was fair, but the team was beaten by Georgetown in an interesting game, and lost to North Carolina on account of poor fielding. Since the sourthern trip the team has beaten Columbia by the score of 2 to 1, and Princeton, 6 to 1. It has been defeated, however, by Princeton...
From present indications it is certain that the conference this year will be the most successful ever held. Over 600 students, representing 100 schools, colleges and universities in Canada and the East, will be present. Among the speakers already announced are Campbell Morgan of London, Dr. Maltbre D. Babcock of New York, President Seth Low of Columbus, Robert E. Speer of New York; and Dr. Alexander McKemais of Cambridge. The fact that John R. Moss of the World's Christian Student Federation will preside as and direct the conference augure well for the success...
...time of the last two events--the hammer throw and the pole vault--Harvard was ahead by 47 points to Yale's 41, needing only 6 points to win. Although Goodhue and Sawyer both did better in the pole vault than they had ever done before in practice neither was able to secure a place. Goodhue cleared the bar on his last trial, but knocked it off with his elbow. Although Boal had repeatedly thrown the hammer over 140 feet in practice, he was able to do only 126 feet, and then stepped out of the ring and was disqualified...
...match from the Smith and Wesson second team by a score of 796 to 788. The team has had little practice lately and the game was won by the unusually good scores of the first three men. This is the first time that any Smith and Wesson team has ever been defeated...
...could handle such a series of lectures in a most attractive manner. Several are old enough to make their remarks in part reminiscent; others would have little trouble in preparing a few facts that could not fail to interest an audience of College men. And if such lectures are ever announced in the CRIMSON, let us have them prefaced by "*" (open to the University), not by a "*" (open to the Public). Let us have no picnic suppers in the Fogg Art Lecture Room, so that the helpless undergraduate, arriving at 7.45, may be able to find a seat...