Word: winners
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Track, New York. There are five races, a quarter mile, half mile, one mile, five miles, and one mile tandem. First place in each event counts five points, second two points, third one point. The college which gets the greatest number of points from the five events is the winner of the races and receives five points to add to its total number of points made in the other track and field events; the second highest receives two points to add; the third one point. The following Harvard men left Boston last night for New York to compete...
...most promising men in the quarter-mile; and L. Mills, of Worcester High; Marks, of English High; Huntress and Porter, of Hopkinson, and W. Applegate, of Cambridge High and Latin, are the best men in the half. E. W. Mills, of Chauncey Hall, is considered a sure winner of the mile and should make good time. D. T. Sullivan, of Worcester High, is another good mile-runner...
Both hurdle races should be very close. J. W. Hallowell of Hopkinson is a very promising man in the high hurdles, and Converse of English High is also very fast. Converse is thought to be a certain winner of the low hurdles, as he has won this event in both national and local interscholastic meets before. J. J. Peters of Andover is another good hurdler...
Princeton and Yale now stand tied for the cup. The tie will be shot off early next month, and the trophy will become the permanent property of the winner...
Yesterday afternoon only one match was actually played in the tennis tournament, three others being won by default. R. A. Bidwell '99, J. F. Brice '99, and R. McKittrick '99, are now in the semi-finals, and the winner of the Ward-Hall match will be the fourth man. The summary is as follows...