Word: beating
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Williams College sophomores beat the Greylock Institute foot-ball eleven, one goal to three touchdowns, at Williamstown, Thursday. The Williams freshmen beat the Williston Seminary players five touchdowns to two, at Easthampton...
...first game in the college championship was played Wednesday afternoon, on the Polo Grounds, between Princeton and Columbia. The game was a foregone conclusion, and it only remained to be seen how badly Princeton would beat their opponents. Princeton kicked off, and scored a goal in less than a quarter of an hour. Another touchdown and goal soon followed, and still another. The fourth goal was scored by a kick from the field, making a score of 4 goals and 1 touchdown in the first half. in the second another touchdown was made by Princeton, but no goal...
...double sets in the tennis tournament have resulted as follows: Sears and Beals beat Bullard and Simes; Clark and Denniston beat Bonsal and Osborne, 6-4, 6-2; Gardner and Warren beat Howard and Hoyt; Winslow and Rockwell beat Ordway and Buffum, 6-4, 6-5; Sears and Beals beat Clark and Denniston, 1-6, 6-2, 6-2. The remaining sets are Sears and Beals against Gardner and Warren; Winslow and Rockwell...
...studies of Harvard, Yale and our university were conceded to be what was required for the education of girls, they would be speedily adopted in the colleges for girls. It looks as if this clamor for co-education was a part of that absurdity which is striving to beat down all the barriers between the sexes. The uses of co-education are not all clear. I can suppose that the young men in an institution where co-education prevailed would be benefited by the constant association with the other sex; that their manners would be refined, and that they would...
...with their hats on, and were greeted with a storm of stamping, which the hissing of some of the more sensible and courteous men was unable to subdue. The gentlemen were much bewildered at this strange greeting, and being very naturally unable to divine the cause of the uproar, beat a hasty retreat. Now, although we have a great deal of sympathy for the delicate sensibilities of those men who are unable to bear with equanimity the sight of hats, we feel that a more sensible way for them to act would be to get up and leave the hall...