Word: tieing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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High-jump.--Won by G. G. Haydock '16 (6 in.); second, F. H. Copeland '17 (6 in.); third, tie between J. O. John-stone '16 (scratch) and G. E. Bullard '17 (10 in.). Height...
High-jump.--Won by D. S. Laird (Smith); second, A. R. Frey (Smith); third, tie between L. Barnes (Smith), B. Post (Smith), and A. I. Smith (Gore). Height...
...Harvard-Yale Baseball Game (in case of a tie), Braves Field, Boston...
...today by a score of 3 to 1. Dowd, the Princeton pitcher, was in excellent form and held the visitors down to two hits, but the Princeton fielding was very ragged. In the first inning Dartmouth was able to score two runs on errors, and this was sufficient to tie up the game. The Princeton batting was sensational, nine hits being made in all, one of which was a home-run by Driggs. This came at an inopportune time, however, for the bases were empty...
...which in 1915 was .226, is now .239, and the fielding, formerly .944, is .956. Individual averages are proportionately higher. R. Harte '17, the heaviest hitter on the team, has 31 points more than last spring. Abbot, who batted only .140, has risen from ninth in the list to tie for fourth place among the regulars with Mahan, his present average being .277. C. L. Harrison '18, who heads the list, has played only one game. Of the fourteen contests from which these averages are reckoned, only Abbot, Coolidge, Harte, and Nash have played in every one. Wyche, whose figures...