Word: winter
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...handicap.- P. da S. Prado '96, F. McCarthy '97, C. E. Smith '97, F. H. Bartlett '95, F. Mason '96, D. Winter Gr., A. Dyrenforth '96, L. T. Hildreth '96, W. A. Shakman '97, H. M. Wheelwright '94, A. M. Eaton '97, H. L. Williams '97, J. L. Bremer, '96, S. M. Merrill '94, W. F. Garcelon L. S., K. K. Kubli L. S., A. A. Lefurgey L. S., H. G. Dorman '96, F. A. Dorman '94, B. B. Howard '96, J. P. Whittren...
...second Winter Meeting was held in the gymnasium last Saturday afternoon. J. P. Whittren '95 won the shot putting with a put of 34ft. 9 1-2in; K. K. Kubli Sp. was second with a put of 34ft. 8 1-4in. N. Kishimoto Gr. won from M. A. Saladana Sp. in the 125 lb. class wrestling bout. J. L. Ketcham '96 won the best two out of three bouts against W. S. Youngman '95 in the 145 lb. class. W. A. D. Short '94 and E. F. Champney '96 were the only contestants in the boxing match, which...
Yesterday afternoon at President Eliot's house the Directors of the Harvard Dining Association met the President and Dr. Wolcott, to confer with them about the uses of the Dining Hall next year. Nothing has been more apparent this winter than the unsatisfactory arragement of the general tables, as there has averaged at them two and three quarter men per seat. This is on the face of it most unsatisfactory. There are now 1125 members of the association, of which number 597 are at the 17 general tables, while the waiting list numbers over...
There will be no regular second winter meeting this year as all the events, with the exception of putting the shot, welterweight sparring and featherweight wrestling, have had to be given up for lack of entries. The shot putting will take place at 3 p. m. on Saturday in the gymnasium, and the wrestling at 3.30 in the same place. The sparring will come at 4 p. m. in the rooms of the Sparring Club, 6 Brattle street...
...hope that Winter Meetings,- at least any to which admission is charged, are things of the past. We take this position, not because the Winter Meetings are bad but because they have out lived their usefulness. When there are many forms of athletics in which students eagerly take part the attempt to continue old forms which have little to recommend them except that they were once popular,- this seems to us like throwing good effort away. The meetings which are really needed are those held out-of-doors, and we are sure that such painstaking and conscientious work...