Word: low
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...yard low hurdles--H. Taylor '07, A. Peterson '04, F. R. Bauer...
...open novice fencing tournament held by the Fencers' Club in the Gymnasium on Wednesday evening first prize was won by W. MacLeod '05; T. Lage, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, second, and F. Low '07, third. The judges were: R. E. Daniels '05, R. S. Earle 2L., C. E. Nichols '07, H. W. Holmes 1G., H. J. Elam 3L., and W. B. Tyler, secretary of the American Fencing League Association...
...entries for the tournament are as follows: G. W. Kretzinger 3L., L. W. Sumner '05, H. W. Barnum 3L., H. A. Hirsh '05, J. R. Nichols '06, A. Tyng '04, L. F. Gilbert '06, C. B. Keeler, Jr., '05, W. F. Low, Jr., '07, W. MacLeod '05, H. P. Dart 1L., R. Merrill...
...President calls attention to the fact that the death rate in the University is remarkably low. In the year 1902-1903, there were only three deaths among the 632 persons who were members of Governing Boards and of the University staff, a rate of only 4.7 in 1000. among the 4,261 students in the University last year, excluding members of Radcliffe College and the Summer School, there were 10 deaths, a rate of 2.34 in 1000. In 1900 the death rate among males twenty and thirty years of age in the city of Boston was about 9 per cent...
...educated man to solve. He then showed that the great size of New York makes the combat against evil particularly interesting. Mr. Hinrichs then narrated the history of Brooklyn politics since 1881, as a good example of how upright men with high ideals have succeeded. He told how Mr. Low, a practically unknown man, became mayor of Brooklyn twice, although the city was normally of the opposite political party. After describing the course of politics there until its consolidation with Greater New York in 1897, the speaker described Mr. Low's three candidacies for mayor of New York...