Word: winners
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...each man will fence every man on the other five teams. Of the colleges entered, the University has defeated Bowdoin, Pennsylvania and Columbia. This meet will decide both the individual and team championships. Annapolis was the victor last year in the team championships, Moquin of Columbia being the individual winner, although closely pressed by Captain Russell of the University team for first honors...
...University of Chicago was the winner of the intercollegiate meet held in New Haven Friday night, with Princeton and Pennsylvania tied for second, and New York University third. The University had only two men entered in the meet, Captain D. Campbell '17 and J. M. French '17. Campbell secured first in the parallel bars, this being the only place won by the University. Brown was the only team entered in the meet that did not figure in the scoring. The scores were: Chicago, 14 1-2; Pennsylvania, 8; Princeton, 8; New York University, 6; Harvard, 5; Haverford, 5; Rutgers...
...remainder of the rowing season have been made. Hereafter Coach Haines will be in charge of only the first three University and first three Freshman eights. The lower University crews, under Coach Brown, will be divided into class boats which will compete in the spring regatta; the winner of this race will row Yale in the regatta at New London in June. Coach Manning will instruct the remaining Freshman crews. Today all the Freshman oarsmen will be transferred from Newell to Weld...
Professor Theodore William Richards '86, winner of the Nobel Chemistry Prize of $40,000 in 1914, is a member of the International Commission on Atomic Weights. His many honors include degrees from 12 universities and membership in many of the leading scientific societies of Germany, Sweden, and the United States...
...strong In the pole vault, Heyl and Nagel can both clear 12 feet. Rodman and Grant are the best of the high jumpers, and the latter has done over 22 feet in the broad jump. Braden, the football star, can toss the weight 45 feet and is the logical winner of the shot put against both the University and Princeton. Of the field events, Yale is weakest in the hammer-throw