Word: numbers
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...finals of the third annual winter track carnival were held Saturday afternoon, the field events taking place in the Hemenway Gymnasium and the track events on the board track on Holmes Field. The holding of the trials on Friday had greatly reduced the number of competitors, with the result that the events were run off quickly and without the usual uninteresting elimination heats. The relay race, in which only three teams were entered, was won by the Mt. Auburn street team, which set a new record. Cups were awarded to those winning first and second places and to the members...
...third annual winter track carnival will commence in the Hemenway Gymnasium and on the board track on Holmes Field this afternoon at 3.45 o'clock. This year there are not as many events as in former years, but the number of entries in each event is proportionately greater. There are about 325 entries, and some 185 individual men will take part. The carnival will continue tomorrow afternoon when the finals of the various events will be run off. This afternoon only the trial heats in the track events, and the elimination trials in the field events, will take place. There...
About 300 entries have been made for the winter track carnival in the Hemenway Gymnasium tomorrow and Saturday. As compared with the entry lists of previous years, this number is unusually large. Additional entries in the dormitory relay races may be made in the blue-book at the Gymnasium before 5 o'clock this afternoon. No one who has not taken a strength test since January 1, or who is on probation, will be allowed to compete. All those who have not taken the strength test must do so today between 3 and 5 o'clock...
...good average number, as we said; but again--why do not the editors show us how they can write
...current number of the Advocate, reviewed in another column this morning, contains an article on "The Yard Dormitories." The argument is convincing that these dormitories are not what they should be. Of course they are habitable; at times they are even delightfully comfortable, but we, as Harvard undergraduates, are not proud of them, nor are we content with them. We do not wish to blow up our Gymnasium, but we do wish to see it superseded, just as we wish to see our College dormitories modernized...