Word: miller
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...passed by unnoticed in the enthusiasm. It was a high spot of Crimson track, and men like R. G. Allen '26, F. P. Kane '26, L. L. Robb '25, C. G. T. Lundell '27, K. N. Rogers '26, E. C. Haggerty '27, W. I. Tibbetts '26, and A. H. Miller '27 composed a remarkable galaxy...
...reveal what was accomplished, Miller took the 40-yard dash, Allen the 300-yard run, Kane the 600-yard run, Watters the 1000-yard run, Tibbetts the two-mile run, and Fletcher the 45-yard hurdles. In his race Allen clipped two-fifths of a second off the 300-yard run. When the pistol cracked for the start of the 600-yard event. Haggerty was badly blocked at the start and Kane was soon trailing fourth or fifth. By the time the runners had passed the press stand with but two more laps before the finish, Kane had sneaked...
...Miller thundered down the 40-yard trail in four and three-fifths seconds, breaking another record, and Captain Bowen of Cornell lengthened the record distance in both the weight events...
...broad jump, Glendenning, a former Andover flash, showed promise, and was in addition entered in the dash, the 300-yard run, and the relay. Other outside threats were Captain Russell of the Ithacan contingent and his teammate Goodwillie. They both were figured on to threaten the dash supremacy of Miller...
...have all played prominent roles in Crimson track history. In the first year of Coach Farrell's teaching they were to be the nucleus of a strong team. Moreover, at this time, one of the major lights of University track affairs began to Twinkle. For when A. H. Miller '27, in the Freshman dash event of the 1924 Triangular meet, led E. W. Goodwillie, Cornell first year sprinter to the tape, he not only equalled the University time of four and four-fifths seconds, but beat a promising dash man reputed to be able to outspeed any of the Cornell...