Word: unionizations
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...event will be started without them." "Only club officials and members of the press will be allowed inside the track." "A bell will be rung at the beginning of the last lap." "No coaching the contestants allowed."No professional bicycle rider will be allowed to start any contestant." "Bicycle Union and League rules to govern the meeting." The entries include many names of note in bicycling circles, both among college men and amateurs generally, those best known among the visitors being Hendee, Frazier, Hamilton of Yale, who won at New York on Saturday; Maxwell, also of Yale, Haven, Segur, Sabin...
...Cornell Era is authority for the following statements as to the men composing some of the so-called college nines of the New York College Base-ball Association. Of the Union College nine it says...
This is certainly a fine showing for a nine composed of undergraduates. The status of the Hamilton nine must be on a par with Union if this single sentence from the Era is true. It continues: "Hamilton men claim that at least four of their nine are straight college men." With the next number of the Era we may expect to hear further particulars about some of the other nines...
Professionalism among the colleges of New York State has taken on a queer aspect. Several college-Cornell, Hobart, Rochester, Hamilton and Union, have formed an association and are now playing for the champion ship, and it appears that all except Cornell, if we are informed correctly, have regular professional players on their nines. It may be because we are bigoted on the subject of professionalism, but we confess that we are unable to see what possible right a nine, composed partially of professional players, has to play for a college championship any more than a league nine, under the name...
HUNDRED YARDS DASH.The meeting was opened with the trial heats of the hundred yards dash. W. H. Philip, '84, of Union, won the first, 10 2-5s.; Brooks of Yale, the second, 10 2-5s., and W. Baker the third, 10 2-5s. Billings, '85, the only other Harvard man entered, came in second in the third heat, and so ran in the finals. In the final heat the word to "set" was so quickly followed by the pistol shot that Baker was taken unprepared, and so failed to catch Brooks...