Word: wednesday
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...will open on Tuesday afternoon at 3.45 o'clock with the 600, 1,000 and mile runs. If the weather permits, the pole-vault, shot-put, and high jump will also take place. The 40 and the 300 yard dashes, and the relay race will be run off one Wednesday...
Class relay races between four teams of ten men each will be the feature of the Winter Track Carnival to be held next Tuesday and Wednesday. H. C. Flower has been appointed captain of the 1919 team, J. A. Duggan of the 1920, D. O'Connell of the 1921, and R. Chute of the 1922. Each man will run two laps...
Manager L. B. Leonard '19 has announced that the annual winter track carnival will be held on Tuesday and Wednesday, March 11 and 12. All members of the University who have a satisfactory record in their college work are eligible to compete. Blue books are posted in the Freshman Halls, Leavitt & Peirce's, H. A. A., and in the Locker Building, and all men who expect to enter should sign up as soon as possible. The list of events includes the 40-yard dash, 300, 600, 1000-yard and mile runs, shot-put and pole-vault. All events will...
Since nine o'clock yesterday morning the University has been blessed by the birth of twin magazines, or, more correctly speaking, two magazines, each boasting the same highly cacophonous and widely copyrighted title. Wednesday's red polemic entitled "The Harvard Magazine" is being followed this morning by a collegiate Collier's of the identical title. The original offering with its motto "Luceat ad Nauseam" surmounted by three niger apes, rampant, proves to be an exceedingly clever parody on the true Magazine which appears in a cover of virgin purity and purports to be "everyone's" (including Radcliffe's) paper...
Preliminary trials will be held next Wednesday, from which candidates will be chosen for the final contest, to take place soon after the Easter recess. Robert Browning's "How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix" is the selection to be recited...