Word: marked
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...strength of the 1931 team lies mostly in the track events while the New Hampshire team is relying on its strength in the field to produce a victory Kuehn in the high jump and shot put, and Mark Tyson, in the shot, discus, and javelin are counted on to score heavily for Exeter, while the Freshmen are relying on Vernon Munroe '31, A. L. Watkins '31, W. C. Rowe '31, and R C Aldrich '31 to swell the Crimson total in the running events...
First place in the broad jump will probably go to A. E. French '29, with second and third counting for Dartmouth. B. G. Burbank '29, in the pole vault, is expected to clear the bar considerably over the high mark of Putnam of the Big Green aggregation...
...February have both died. The most that can be expected of the second Reading Period is that it should render to its authors results of equal conclusiveness with those of the first Reading Period. Statistics are not the most strong exidence in its favor. Perhaps the most definite mark of its firm establishment is present in the least definite phenomenon at Harvard--student opinion. Perhaps it was in Cambridge first, as now, that silence in matters of great moment became known as token of assent...
Junior crew--Stroke, D. S. Greer '29; 7, D. R. Kroell '29; 6, Edward Hamlin Jr. '29; 5, C. A. Hanson '29; 4, R. B. Harkness '29; 3, W. F. Wyeth '29; 2, E. F. Hall '29; bow, Mark Hopkins '29; cox., P. W. Rounds...
...first year of the interscholastic games, only three schools competed. The events were run off at Southborough, St. Mark's Schol being the meet host. Among the events listed in this meet were the tug-of-war, throwing the baseball, and the one mile walk. The winner of the 100-yard dash tore down the cinders to break the tape in 10 4-5 seconds, only 4-5 of a second more than the present interscholastic record...