Word: champion
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...single matches, which, in this instance, bars Messrs. Presbrey, '85, and Taylor, '86. The double tournament is free to all. This is a change from the previous custom made by reason of the fact that the winning pair in the fall tournament is never looked upon as champion in the same sense as the winning single player. Any person connected with the college can enter the tournament, since there is no longer a fee of membership connected with the associament, which entitle the players to free use of the turf courts, are 50 cents for single entries, and 15 cents...
...single matches, which, in this instance, bars Messrs. Presbrey, '85, and Taylor, '86. The double tournament is free to all. This is a change from the previous custom made by reason of the fact that the winning pair in the fall tournament is never looked upon as champion in the same sense as the winning single player. Any person connected with the college can enter the tournament, since there is no longer a fee of membership connected with the association. The entrance fees to the tournament, which entitle the players to free use of the turf courts, are 50 cents...
...Boston Record thinks that it is significant, as showing how Boston muscle is at a premium, that not only the champion prize fighter hails from their centre of culture, but that seventeen of the thirty-two members of the Harvard class crews claim Boston as their home...
...Inter-collegiate Cricket Association met last Saturday afternoon in New York. Harvard, Haverford, Columbia and Pennsylvania were represented. Mr. H. L. Clark of Harvard, was elected president for one year. The champion cup was awarded to Haverford. The programme for the spring matches was arranged in part as follows: June 6, at Nicetown, Pennsylvania vs. Haverford; June 22, at Philadelphia, Harvard vs. Haverford; June 23, at Nicetown, Harvard vs. Pennsylvania...
...Inter-collegiate Cricket Association met last Saturday afternoon in New York. Harvard, Haverford, Columbia and Pennsylvania were represented. Mr. H. L. Clark of Harvard, was elected president for one year. The champion cup was awarded to Haverford. The programme for the spring matches was arranged in part as follows : June 6, at Nicetown, Pennsylvania vs. Haverford; June 22, at Philadelphia, Harvard vs. Haverford; June 23, at Nicetown, Harvard vs. Pennsylvania...