Word: finishers
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...report of S. L. Fuller '98, graduate manager of athletics, shows that the only organizations to finish the year 1898-99 with profits were the University football and baseball, and the 1902 baseball associations. As was the case the year before last, the football association paid most of the expenses of the other organizations, by finishing the year with a surplus of $27,745.96, which is a gain of about $1000 over the previous year. In addition to supporting the other branches of athletics, the management has been enabled to expend over $13,000 on permanent betterments and improvements...
...club-house. The Marathon run will take place on April 19, 1900. The course will be from Ashland to the B. A. A. club-house, a distance of twenty-five miles. Prizes will be given to the first six men and souvenirs to all who finish...
...afternoon. The course of a little over six miles led to the Charles River, around Mt. Auburn Cemetery, through East Watertown and home by way of Fresh Pond. W. G. Clerk '01 and F. B. Taylor 1L. were the hares. The break, three-quarters of a mile from the finish, was won by D. Grant 2M., who came in about fifty yards ahead of S. H. Bush '01. H. S. Knowles '02 was a close third...
...Freshman interclub crew races between three crews from the Weld and two from the Newell Boat Clubs will be rowed this afternoon at 4 o'clock. The course will be down stream a mile and a half, with the finish at the Union Boat Club. The race will be very important as a test both of the rowing material in the Freshman class, and of the relative merits of the two strokes taught at the Weld and at the Newell. A larger proportion of the men than ever has rowed at their preparatory schools. The drawing for positions gives...
...hounds run which was postponed on Wednesday on account of the football celebration was held yesterday afternoon. The course led through Norton's woods, and up Beacon street to Porter Station, then home by Massachusetts avenue, with a break at Shepard street, about half a mile from the finish. There were no hares, and the hounds were led by H. B. Clark '01, who was the first man home. The run was nearly three miles long, and the pace was very slow up to the break...