Word: weeklies
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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This year the Cornell crews have been very seriously handicapped by poor weather. Although they had their first work on the inlet on February 22, the crews were only able to get out about twice a week during the whole month of March. In the course of practice during this month Coach Courtney found that he did not have enough good men to make up two satisfactory university crews, and on March 15 he took Kelley and Weed out of the University boat and placed them in the junior university crew at No. 3 and stroke respectively. This junior crew...
Cornell has this year played but two games with teams which the University nine has met. The first game of her schedule was with Georgetown and resulted in a victory for Cornell by the score of 6 to 3. A week before the University team played at Providence, Cornell made five runs against Brown and the score stood 5 to 0. Yale won from Cornell, 4 to 3, early in the season in an eleven inning game. Since the season on Percy Field opened Cornell has won three out of six games played and has succeeded in shutting out three...
...although the latter beat him in the Pennsylvania relay games early in the season. Since then Foster has constantly improved and will be at his best today and tomorrow. Sherman of Dartmouth, who took second a year ago, is not expected to compete as he strained a tendon last week. In his absence third and fourth places should lie between Minds of Pennsylvania, Hawley of Dartmouth, and Cary of Yale. Gamble of Princeton has not been in the best of condition lately and may not place, a though he was fourth last year. McArthur of Cornell and Geary of Fordham...
...broad jump will again be a critical event. Cook of Cornell is capable of jumping 23 feet, which is enough to win. Kilpatrick of Yale will undoubtedly do better than he did two week sago and is a sure second and a possible first. Nixon of Cornell is the most likely man for third, while Harvard with Little and Long has a chance for a point...
...have but little more than a week of lectures before the end of the term, and then after a short period of examinations the College year will be over. The questions which have been discussed during the term have been in a few instances favorably decided, but many of the live issues raised have been allowed practically to die out. What looked like a successful movement in the direction of a new Gymnasium has apparently entirely dropped from the attention of the undergraduates. We do not know whether the Corporation is considering the problem; we only hope that...