Word: fifths
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Group two, as usual, claims between one-fourth and one-fifth of the class. Physics shows the greatest gain, with ten men from 1919 as against one for 1918. Chemistry leads the group with a total of 78 men, six more than ever before...
...then the New Jersey team has won twice and dropped one game. Both Brown and Pennsylvania have been beaten, but Yale won out in a 5 to 2 struggle last Saturday. Tuesday's contest with the Philadelphians was an extra-inning affair. A 2-2 tie developed in the fifth and it required three extra frames to settle it. However, when the break came, the Tigers drove over five runs in a bunch, making the final count 7 and 2. Princeton developed considerable hitting ability in this game, banging out 14 safeties in the course of the afternoon...
...second baseball team was defeated by the Yale seconds 3 to 1, on Soldiers Field yesterday afternoon. Watrous pitched well for Yale, allowing only seven scattered hits, and striking out 11 batsmen. He practically won the game in the fifth inning by slamming a home-run to left field. In the same inning Patten had scored on a long fly to left field which was muffed. Yale's third run came in the ninth, when Patten scored on a hit, an error, and a single by Bierwirth...
...yard hurdles was won by Gubb of Cornell, with Murray of Stanford second. Preble of California and Norton of Stanford finished in that order in the second heat. J. V. Farwell of Yale won the heat for third and fourth men and under the new rules was credited with fifth place without entering the final. Murray skimmed over the hurdles in fine form in the final, setting up a new intercollegiate record of 15 seconds. Gubb, Preble, and Norton followed in order...
Murray and Norton of Stanford won the semi-final heats in the 220-yard hurdles, with Farwell of Yale and Brown of Penn. State second respectively. Savage of Bowdoin placed fifth by winning