Word: contestant
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Tomorow evening the Harvard Fencing Club team will compete in the contest for the Shaw Cup, offered for the team championship of the Amateur Fencers' League. The competition is to take place in the New York Athletic Club's club-house. The contesting teams are: Harvard, A. G. Thacher '97, J. E. Hoffman '96, and J. P. Parker '96; New York Fencers' Club, A. V. Z. Post, Fitzhugh Townsend, and C. S. Tatham; New York Athletic Club, Bothner, Haubold and Cavignac...
With the prospect of a quadrangular freshman race, the freshman crew has a definite aim towards which to direct its efforts. The material for a good crew is this year unusually good, and gives promise of a close and exciting contest on the twenty-sixth of June. The freshmen have had good coaching so far, and are making rapid improvement by hard and earnest work. If the class gives their crew hearty and enthusiastic support from this time on there is no reason in the world why an excellent prospect should not make the final victory a certainty. We shall...
...students. Want of loyalty to a team must never be charged to Harvard men, whose enthusiasm is not wont to flag even in the face of defeat. The Athletic Association is in need of help, and if Harvard is to have a fair chance in the intercollegiate contest next spring, student interest must revive. The men training for the team owe it to the University to do their best to bring her victory, and it is certainly the duty of the students to see that the efforts of their representatives do not fail for want of financial support...
...sending a crew from New Haven to compete in the Henley regatta is a natural one. If developed with the success of past years, the Yale crew would probably be as representative as any that could be sent from any of the American colleges, and as such its contest with English college crews would be watched with very great interest by Americans generally. It is apparently hoped by the Yale authorities that the meeting of college crews from both sides of the water will lead the way in a subsequent year to a race with one of the two great...
...itself, the desire to bring about a contest between English and American crews or other teams is natural and harmless. And if it could occasionally be done, say once in four years, there would probably be few objections. Any arrangement for more frequent contests we believe should be out of the question. By creating an abnormal interest, they would be sure to make athletics assume a position in college life, at least in America, entirely out of proportion to their real importance...