Word: teams
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...splendid service to Harvard with a fourth well under way as a captain in every sense of the word and then to be deprived of the very thing most desired is a bitter disappointment. No man has deserved more than Captain Burr the pleasure and thrill of leading a team to victory. His has been the spirit of that team from the very first game to the last. It was wise, however, not to let him play as his shoulder was in such condition that he ran great risks of being permanently injured. We admire his pluck and his skill...
...University chess team defeated Yale in the annual match, at Dwight Hall, New Haven, Friday night, by the score of 8 to 2, winning seven of the 10 games played, receiving a draw in two, and losing one. Medals will be presented to the members of the winning team from the bequest of A. C. White '02. This is the fifth successive year that Harvard has won from Yale...
...trials for the four-board team which shall represent the University in the intercollegiate chess tournament, to be held in New York, December 21-23, between Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Columbia, begin today. The team will be picked December 10. HARVARD. YALE. Gruening, 1 G. Burgess, 0 Johnson, 1/2 E. Burgess, 1/2 Parshley, 1 Jefferson, 0 Clark, 1/2 Chandler, 1/2 Masius, 1 Clarke, 0 Childs, 1 Martinez, 0 Davis, 1 Porter, 0 Byerly, 1 Lambie, 0 Mitchell, 1 Gade, 0 Jones, 0 Waugh, 1 Totals...
Cornell easily won the intercollegiate cross-country run held at Princeton, N. J., on Saturday, with a score of 29. Syracuse was second with 87, and Harvard third with 89. The scores of the other teams were: Yale 90, Michigan 105, Pennsylvania 134, Columbia 188. Only four of the Princeton team finished, with the result that their score does not count, while the Technology team failed to register with the Intercollegiate Association and consequently were not eligible for the prizes. Had the latter team officially taken part in the race they would have finished second, and Harvard and Syracuse would...
Following are the positions and times of the first four men to finish and of the Harvard team: 1, H. C. Young, Cornell, 34m., 14s.; 2, G. A. Dull, Michigan, 34m., 16s.; 3, H. Jaques, Jr., '11, 34m., 20s.; 4, P. J. Taylor, Cornell, 34m., 30s.; 14, M. H. Whitney '09, 35m., 29s.; 15, R. E. Dole '10, 35m., 44s.; 25, G. Murphy '10, 36m., 54s., 32, H. Y. Masten '10, 37m., 35s.; 41, E. Parson '11, 38m., 18s.; 45, W. P. Rogers...