Word: oler
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...worth only one point more than the man who finishes second, so that it is not the team with a few individual stars that should win, but the team uniformly strong in every event. Herein lies Yale's chances for victory. Besides stars like Brown, Poucher, Potter, and Oler, Yale has a lost of men who can score thirds, fourths and fifths, and should score heavily in practically every event but the dashes. It is this quality of all-round strength that makes the New Haven aggregation a favorite...
Running High jump.--Won by W. M. Oler (Y.); second, J. O. Johnstone '16; third, R. A. Douglas (Y.). Height...
...enabled to win all three places in the hammer-throw, although the Harvard man surpassed P. Loughridge's throw by 3 ft. C. E. Brickley '15 scored one point in the shotput with a throw of 41 feet, 9 1-4 inches. The high jump saw W. M. Oler of Yale, and J. O. Johnstone '16 fighting it out for first place. The latter stopped at six feet, but Oler cleared 6 ft., 1 1-2 inches. R. A. Douglas of Yale took third. Immediately afterwards, Johnstone made his winning jump of 22 feet, 10 inches in the broad jump...
...greatest need is in the distance events. T. H. Cornell '15, in the short distances; V. Wilkie '15 and A. H. Revell '15S, are good men and should place. The pole-vault is fairly well taken care of and the high jump has an excellent new man in W. Oler '16, captain of last year's freshman team. N. S. Talbot '15S., is back for the hammer and is sure of a place in all the meets. W. F. Roos '15S, is the mainstay in the shot...
...pound shot-put. Harvard: R. R. Cowen, J. A. Gilman, A. T. Lyman, E. Mahan, K. B. G. Parson, W. Rollins; Yale: W. R. Clendinniing, W. M. Oler...