Word: contesters
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RULE 1. AMATEURS.No student shall be allowed to represent Harvard University or the University of Pennsylvania in any public athletic contest, either individually or as a member of any team, who either before or since entering the University shall have engaged for money in any athletic competition, whether for a stake, or a money prize, or a share of the entrance fees or admission money; or who shall have taught or engaged in any athletic exercise or sport as a means of a livelihood; or who shall at any time have received for taking part in any athletic sport...
RULEII. Bona Fide Students.No one shall be allowed to represent Harvard University of Pennsylvania in any public contest, either individually or as a member of any team, unless he is, and intends to be throughout a college year, a bona fide member of the University, taking a full year's work...
...hereafter entering the University, who is not a regular student in the college or scientific school, and no regular student in either of these departments, who has ever played in an intercollegiate contest upon a Class or University team of any other college, shall play upon a Harvard or University of Pennsylvania team until he has resided one academic year at the University and passed the annual examinations upon a full year's work...
Each captain shall send to the captain of the opposing team a complete list of his players and substitutes, with a statement that he believes them to be bona fide students and amateurs, at least twenty-five days before the date of the contest in which they are to take part, No one shall be included in such list, who has not declared in writing his eligibility within the preceding rules in the presence of a member of the graduate committee. No one whose name is not on such a list shall be allowed to play in an intercollegiate game...
...hard hitting and poor fielding. Last year the first game between the two nines with the same pitchers in the box was very close, four to three and a crowd of some five hundred students turned out in expectation of another good game. All hopes for such a contest were destroyed in the first inning when, after two men out, Harvard made four hits one of them a three-bagger, and aided by a few timely errors, rolled up six runs. From that point on all uncertainty as to the result was gone. Dartmouth turned all her energies toward securing...