Word: marked
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...will be rated high when the athletes take the track tonight will be Boston College, with a nucleus of Hussey. Sophomore dash star, a two mile relay team which is reputed to be made up of four men who can average two or three seconds under the two minute mark for the half mile, and Murphy, a hurdler who has an imposing record in the national Junior and Senior A. A. U. contests last spring...
...Miller will also certainly clash with Frank Hussey, holder of the National A. A. U. 100-yard title who will compete for Boston College. The Crimson sprint star has bested the Boston College flyer consistently this season in the shorter dashes, but Hussey comes fast after the 50-yard mark and has been clocked in close to record time in this event. He has been trained carefully this season and has just reached the top of his stride...
...integrity is at discount in Manhattan as compared with the average school community, school children are sly and mousing when taking examinations. That was the inference the National Vocational Guidance Association could but draw from a paper read before it last week at its meeting in Washington, by Dr. Mark A. May, research specialist of Columbia Teachers' College. He had conducted "a long series of psychiatric tests" upon 245 urchins in a Manhattan public school. When eagle-eyed instructors brooded over the scene to make peeking, cribbing and question-whispering practically impossible, 3% of the children were cunning...
...closest but least spectacular contests of the triangular meet took place Saturday afternoon in the cage. With only one attempt remaining to him, Glen-dinning of Dartmouth, after two false starts, came through with a leap which bettered by one half inch the mark previously set by Jones, the Crimson jumper. Probably the most spectacular per- formance, with the exception of Kane's classic in the relay, was Watters' race in the 1000. The University middle distance star was almost too sick to walk just before the race. He overcame a poor start, and fought every step...
...debating team composed of F. W. Lorenzen '28, D. W. Chapman '27, and Mark Winkler '28, will argue the negative side of the prohibition question with William Kennedy and Edward Carter of Pennsylvania University at 8.15 o'clock this evening in Paine Hall. At the same time H. W. Rose '29. J. J. Fain '27 and D. E. Scoll '28 will uphold the affirmative side of the same question in a debate with Ganson Purcell and Mark Harris of Williams College at Williams town...