Word: gilbert
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Columbia and Syracuse. The most remarkable feature of the trials was the equaling of the world's record of 15 1-5 seconds in the 120-yard hurdle race by Shaw of Dartmouth, thereby breaking Kraenzlein's intercollegiate record of 15 2-5 seconds. In the pole-vault Dray, Gilbert, and Nelson of Yale and Cook of Cornell all cleared 12 feet, thus breaking the intercollegiate record of 11 feet 11 3-4 inches held by Dray of Yale. Whitcher of Harvard in the half-mile, Stephenson of Harvard in the broad jump, and all of the Yale hammer-throwers...
Dray (Y.), Cook (C.), Gilbert (Y.), Nelson (Y.), Campbell...
...directors are: graduate schools--A. B. Church 2L., J. J. Hines 2L., C. V. Imlay 1L., F. E. Staebner 1G.; 1909--H. R. Gilbert, C. H. Watkins, G. A. Whipple; 1910--J. W. Durgin, R. Hutton; 1911-11. G. Doyle, F. C. Whitmore...
Pole-vault--Harvard: J. L. Barr '10, S. C. Lawrence '10, E. L. Parker '10. Yale: C. S. Campbell, W. R. Dray, A. C. Gilbert, J. W. Murphy, F. T. Nelson, J. F. O'Brien, E. H. Reynolds, W. P. Roberts...
...seconds and Robbins the low in 25 seconds. Coy and Riley tied for first in the high jump at 5 feet, 5 1-2 inches, and Daoust got second in the broad jump with 20 feet, 10 1-2 inches. The pole-vault was all Yale's with Dray, Gilbert and Nelson tying at 11 feet, 6 inches. Bushman won the shot-put at 42 feet, 3-4 of an inch. Cooney, Goebel and Bigelow got the places in the hammer-throw, Cooney's distances being 148 feet, 7 1-2 inches...