Word: branches
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Wheeler, H. L. Blackwell, E. S. Wise, E. E. Perry, T. F. Crosthwait, F. C. Sutro, G. Bancroft, F. R. Stoddard, W. Morse, E. Boody, H. W. Adams, F. E. Thayer, C. S. Dolman, W. Soderling, M. S. Holbrook, A. W. Wise, P. G. Carleton, A. E. Branch, F. O. White, P. Auten, R. H. Cox, E. A. Virgin and W. C. Roper...
...chosen to speak in the final competion next Friday at 7.30 p. m., in Harvard 1, were: G. Bancroft, A. E. Branch, P. G. Carleton, W. H. Conroy, Jr., F. B. Granger, W. Morse, W. Soderling, F. R. Stoddard, F. C. Sutro, V. Taylor, F. O. White...
...result of the Harvard-Princeton debate, though not unexpected, occasioned serious thought as to why Princeton with her Halls, and her supposedly superior advantages, should have again suffered defeat in this branch of intercollegiate contests. The following caitorial, which appeared in the Princetonian after the debate, expresses fully and fittingly the sentiment of the college in general...
...greater speed can be developed than on a single wheel. In racing with these machines team work counts more than individual ability. There have been very few races in which a quadracycle has been used, and no college men have as yet tried this branch of bicycling...
...recent action of the Intercollegiate Track Athletic Association in arranging for bicycle races separate from the regular field meet has given bicycling an impetus, and more systematic work in this branch of track athletics has resulted. The university squad now numbers about twenty-three men who have been in training since the middle of January. Up to three weeks ago the work consisted of daily exercise in the gymnasium but since that time the candidates have been able to do outside riding until the recent snow storm. This has handicapped the team considerably as they were just beginning...