Word: pace
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...fourth cross country run has been changed from Friday to today. The run will start as usual promptly at 4 o'clock from the Gymnasium. The course will be four miles long and there will be a half mile break at the finish. The six leaders will set the pace for the break and all the other runners are requested to remain behind them...
...yesterday afternoon brought out 118 men. The course was up Garden street for about a mile and a half, across the fields to Fresh Pond, down Fresh Pond Lane, and home by way of Brattle street, a little over 4 miles in all. The time was 33 minutes. The pace was increased gradually although there was no break at the finish. The leaders were H. B. Clark '01, E. W. Mills '01, O. W. Richardson 2L, and H. S. Knowles...
...first cross country run, held yesterday afternoon, brought out 122 men. The whole squad went together under W. G. Clerk '01, E. W. Mills 3S., and O. W. Richardson 2L., as leaders. A medium pace was taken and there was no break at the finish. The course was up Oxford street beyond Porter Station to the brick church and back to the Gymnasium by Massachusetts avenue. The time for the run was 13 minutes...
...nearly every game to deuce and earning most of his points. Marvin's play weakened a little here but he finally won after a long deuce game. Laverack started with a rush in the last set and soon had the games 4 to 1. He could not keep the pace, however, and after the game stood 5 to 4 allowed Marvin to win three games in succession and also the match...
...editors have evidently attempted to keep pace with the new improvements, for the number as a whole is unusually clever. The chief criticism to be made is that there is hardly enough reading matter to balance the large amount of advertising. The illustrations are the best feature of the issue, the two head pieces by F. G. Hall '03 deserving especial mention both for style and for technique...