Word: although
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Butler made a touchdown. Ball punted out, but no goal. Score 10.0. Dewey ran out from twenty-yard line and Perry carried the ball back on kick of Graham to twenty-yard line. Boyden advanced ten yards. On fumble, Bancroft secured a touchdown. Saxe kicked a beautiful goal, although a high wind was blowing and the ball was very wet and heavy. Score 16-0. Hume ran, but was stopped, and Harvard took the ball on four downs. Saxe and Wood ran, and then Saxe made a long punt over Pennsylvania's line. Our rushers should have fallen on ball...
...Saturday morning, notwithstanding the pouring rain, coaches on coaches of enthusiastic Yale and Princeton men started up Fifth Avenue, New York, for the Polo Grounds. At the grounds about 3,000 water-soaked but excited specrators had gathered to see the great contest. Although Princeton begged to have the game postponed Yale would not listen. At 2 p. m. sharp the two teams lined up with the following players: Yale-Wallace, Gill, Carter, Corbin, Woodrufi, Cross, Pratt; quarter-back, Beecher; halves, Wurtemberg and Graves; full-back, Bull. Princeton-S. Hodge, Church, Cowan, George, Irvine, Speer, Wagenhurst; quarter-back, Hancock; halves...
...back's place and literally pushed the Yale team back five yards. On a fumble of Princeton's half-back, Wallace picked up the ball on the ground, and while Corbin blocked Ames off, carried it over the line for a touchdown. But the interference was too palpable, and although the crowd yelled itself hoarse, the ball was given to Princeton on her twenty-five yard line. Yale, however, soon regained the ball, and by strong rushing and a pretty run by Graves, secured the first touchdown. Goal. Time about 35 minutes. The rest of the half, both teams splashed...
...degree. So in the early universities medicine was the chief study, and up to the sixteenth century the only recognized physicians were graduates of the great universities in England or on the continent. The divorce of medical education from university was accomplisned by the College of Physicians in England. Although university graduates were the only recognized physicians, yet there were many unrecognized practitioners spread throughout the country. Therefore the university graduates in London got themselves incorporated as the College of Physicians, with powers to license all practitioners in the city who did not have a university degree. The power...
...Cambridge to witness the foot-ball game with Harvard Saturday, witnessed as plucky an up-hill game on Princeton's part as could have been desired. As the subsequent play indicated, an entirely unprecedented and purely technical decision of the umpire turned the scales in Harvard's favor. Yet although laboring under immense disadvantage from this ruling, and the crippled condition of other members of the team-Princeton kept a team far out-weighing her from scoring for three-qnarters of the game. In the minds of Princeton men there is but little doubt that the issue would have been...