Most of the New York schools will send strong teams to the Garden. Berkeley and Barnard will be represented by their full strength, and each school will have to exert its utmost efforts to gain more points than its rivals, for several events that both might count on will no doubt go to out-of-town competitors. Drisler's team will probably be made up of Wolff, Pinkus, Curran, and Ingersoll in the sprints; Wolff, Hildburgh, and Howe in the middle distances; Ballin, Wenman, and Eakin in the shot; Katzenbach, Wenman, and Agate in the high jump; Howe and Marlin in the walk; and Katzenbach and Ingersoll in the pole vault.

Trinity will be represented by A. W. Taves and M. Page in the shot, the former with a record of 39 ft. 7 in.; C. A. O'Rourke, Jun., and E. Moran in the hurdles; L. S. Jackson in the mile run; G. McGuire in the mile walk; L. W. Maltby in the high jump; Scott Kidder, pole vault; G. R. Lemcke and W. E. Mitchell in the Junior run; Dudley Fanning, W. M. Van Zandt, and F. C. Simons in the sprint.

Pingry's School, of Newark, will send its best men; and a team made up of the following men will represent Stevens Prep, of Hoboken: R. Shippen, W. Sharkey, N. Stewart, S. McClave, N. McClave, and C. A. Colwell.

The accompanying table of indoor scholastic records of the N.Y.I.S.A.A. includes only those events that are to be contested at the N.M.A.C. games, and has been corrected to date. There is some uncertainty about the accuracy of the shot figures. Berkeley claims that T. A. Ball did 40 ft. 5 in. in 1894. On the other hand, E. Bigelow, of Wilson and Kellogg's, claims that he holds the record with a put of 39 ft. 7 in. The secretary of the N.Y.I.S.A.A. says that his books give the record to Bigelow, but for a put of 37 ft. 7 in. only, and he states that he has no record whatever of Ball's 40 ft. 5 in. put. In the constitution and by-laws of the N.Y.I.S.A.A. recently issued there is given a table of indoor scholastic records, and I have adopted the shot figures given there, 39 ft. ¾ in. for the present purposes.

N.Y.I.S.A.A. INDOOR RECORDS FOR EVENTS TO BE CONTESTED AT N.M.A.C. GAMES.

Event.Record.Holder.
50-yard dashNo record.
220-yard run25-2/5 sec.C. R. Irwin-Martin, Berkeley, 1896.
440-yard run54 sec.C. R. Irwin-Martin, Berkeley, 1896.
Half-mile run2 min. 5 sec.W. S. Hipple, Barnard, 1896.
Mile run4 min. 54-2/5 sec.E. W. Bedford, Barnard, 1896.
Mile walk7 min. 37-4/5 sec.T. L. Bogart, Berkeley, 1892.
50-yard hurdles (3 ft.)No record.
Running high jump5 ft. 8½ in.W. Baltazzi, Harvard, 1895.
Running broad jumpNo record.
Pole vault9 ft. 4 in.E. W. Simpson, Barnard, 1895.
Putting 12-lb. shot39 ft. ¾ in.R. Bigelow, W. and K., 1895.

At the last meeting of the Long Island I.S.A.A. the date for the annual field meeting was set for Saturday, May 23d. The events will doubtless be the same as usual, and will be run off at Eastern Park. There was some objection to the date made by the delegates from St. Paul's, whose nine was scheduled to play against Pratt Institute on that day, but this difficulty was easily adjusted by a rearrangement of the baseball committee's schedule.

The revised schedule, therefore, will go into effect as follows—the arrangement as given in this Department in the issue of January 28th being superseded:

April 18—Latin School vs. St. Paul.
April 22—High-School vs. Adelphi Academy.
April 25—Pratt vs. Poly. Prep.
April 29—High-School vs. Latin School.
May 2—Pratt vs. Latin School.
May 6—High-School vs. St. Paul.
May 6—Poly. Prep. vs. Latin School.
May 9—Pratt vs. Adelphi.
May 16—Pratt vs. High-School.
May 16—Adelphi vs. Latin School.
May 16—Poly. Prep. vs. St. Paul.
June 6—Pratt vs. St. Paul.
June 8—Adelphi vs. Poly. Prep.

The amendment offered at the previous meeting, providing that any team forfeiting a scheduled game within two weeks of the date of the contest shall pay a fine of $5, was adopted. This is a step in the right direction.