Word: haveners
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...first editorial gives authenticity to a story which has been circulating since the Mott Haven games, and which shows the captain and president of the Yale Athletic Association in a very unfavorable light. The proposals these "gentlemen" made are rightly condemned as "disgraceful, underhand" and the most "wretched circumstance" in the history of intercollegiate athletics. The other editorials urge more promptness in paying subscriptions, especially to the college papers; and an appeal to the class of '91 to send more contributions to the Advocate and increase their representation on the staff of editors...
...fourth man, is entitled to a prize. On the other hand, the majority of those who rode in the race understood that only three prizes were to be offered. The club is at present much agitated over the apparently negligent manner in which the bicycle members of the Mott Haven team were treated at New York. Both Davis and Bailey were told to ride the Mott Haven race with the assurance that no objection could possibly be made to their riding safeties against ordinaries, but within two weeks both of them were disqualified...
...following men have been choseras orators at the commencement exercises of Yale, which take place on June 26: William A. McQuaid, New Haven Horace F. Walker, Detroi, Michigan Lester Bradner, Jr., New Haven George Coggill, New York city; Those M. Cullinan, Bridgeport; John B. Dadiels, Niagara Falls; Thomas F. Donnelly, Chicago, Ill.; Joseph H Ensign Simsbury, Ct.; Frederick W. Ellis Ansonia; Charles F. Kent, Palmyra N. Y., Edward L. Parsons, Rye. N. Y. and Lewis Welch, Hartford, Ct. The valedictory and salutatory lie between McQuaid and Walker...
...last of the Yale-Princeton games was played in New Haven last Saturday. This game was by far the most exiting that has been played this year. At the beginning of the ninth inning the score stood 5 to 4 in favor of Princeton, and the game was considered as good as won, but with two men out and two strikes and three balls, Yale made a two-base hit, bringing in a run. Neither side scored in the tenth. In the eleventh Yale scored one run, shutting out Princeton, and won by a score...
...would urge the management of both colleges to take every means to decide speedily the date of the game. It is a matter of considerable importance to a large majority of the men in Cambridge as well as New Haven...