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Word: race (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...University cross-country team finished seventh, with a score of 153 points, in the eleventh annual intercollegiate cross-country run held over the new Massachusetts Institute of Technology course Saturday morning. Cornell easily won the race with 22 points, as the first five of the team finished in the first eight. Technology cam second with a score of 88, followed by Michigan with 112, and Yale with 114. Dartmouth, which entered a team for the first time, unexpectedly finished fifth with 123 points. The scores of the other teams were: Syracuse 143, Pennsylvania 183, Columbia 232, Princeton 234. The weak...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CORNELL WON CROSS-COUNTRY | 11/22/1909 | See Source »

...start was made on the Technology Field at 10.40 O'clock, and the race run in circuits of one and one-half and four and one-half miles. At the start P.D. White of technology took the lead, followed by E.L.Veits '11 of Harvard in second place. The order had changed at the end of the first circuit and H.G. Watkins, L.O.Mills, and H.S. Benson, all of Technology, led. Withington, the first Harvard man at the time was running fifteenth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CORNELL WON CROSS-COUNTRY | 11/22/1909 | See Source »

Tickets admitting to the Technology field, where the race will start and finish, may be obtained at 50 cents each from P. H. Pearson, the manager of the Technology team...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cross-Country Tomorrow Morning | 11/19/1909 | See Source »

Today is "Aeronautical Day" at the Boston 1915 exhibition. At 9 o'clock this evening Mr. Albert A. Merrill will speak on "Aeroplanes," illustrating his lecture with the Curtiss machine, which won the speed race at Rheims last summer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Aeronautical Day at Boston 1915 | 11/19/1909 | See Source »

...race started from the Yale athletic field and ran for one mile through fields, then for five miles over roads and a dirt causeway, and ended with an upgrade and one lap on the Yale field. As the men entered the fourth mile, P. R. Withington '12 was leading, followed by a group of six Yale men. Withington, however, collapsed before the end of the mile, and the race was entirely Yale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE WON CROSS-COUNTRY | 11/13/1909 | See Source »

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