Word: won
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Harvard entries received generous handicaps. Many of the new men showed up well. In the mile run G. Newell '98 took second place after running a remarkably good race. The final heat in the 40 yard handicap dash was composed solely of Harvard men. F. Mason '96 won handily in the fast time of 43/5s. F. B. Fox '96 was a close second, a foot ahead of V. Munroe...
...success which Harvard won last year should be repeated it the cooperation of all the whist players in the University is once secured. If every man who loves the game and can afford the time will enter he will not only obtain a great deal of pleasure out of the tournament, but he will do his part in developing good material for the intercollegiate matches. As has been announced in the CRIMSON, many of the most experienced players have left the University and their places have got to be filled by the men who prove themselves best in the tournament...
...bicyclists will be perhaps the most prominent on the track. The college has many excellent riders. There are Goodman and Ottman, and Dickie, who won the two-mile handicap from scratch within two seconds of the intercollegiate record time at the fall games; W. H. Bird, a N. Y. Athletic Club man; Williams, why rode second in the Princeton-Columbia intercollegiate meet last spring; George Ruppert; Morrill, who won his heat in the intercollegiate race two years ago, and Captain Fearing, who scored Columbia's only point in the '95 intercollegiate meet. Besides these there are a good many less...
...yards run. Burke, the champion quarter-mile runner was too heavily handicapped to do himself justice. About twelve men started in the final heat and for the first lap they were closely bunched; then Powers of St. Paul's S. A. A. took the lead and won by a narrow margin. Blakemore of Harvard came in third...
...fall, four-Richards, Cady, Hickok and Crane-have left college. The loss of Richards will be keenly felt, as he has contributed more to the success of the team than any one man except Hickok. Burnet will be Yale's mainstay in the dashes this year. Hickok not only won more points for Yale in four years than any other man has ever won, but he also trained up three good men in hammer and shot events-Chadwick, Cross and Brown. So Yale will still be strong in these two events. Hatch and Perkins are worthy successors of Cady...