Word: crowds
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...game on Holmes yesterday did not prevent quite a large crowd from assembling on Jarvis to see eighty-five defeat eighty-six. The air was chilly, and prevented very good playing by either nine. The game was chiefly marked by the good pitching of both teams, Presbrey and Crocker being especially effective as a battery. The batting of both teams was very heavy, and the fielding correspondingly bad. Appended is the score...
...crowd assembled to witness the finish of the race was unusually large...
...freshman played their first game Saturday, at Newtonville, and were defeated by the home team. The ground was simply mountanous and the crowd noisy, neither of which, however, is an excuse for the wretched playing of the freshmen. The batting was lamentably weak, and the fielding, though at times fair, as a rule was poor, and showed want of practice and a tendency to get rattled. Fargo and Palmer did the best work for the freshmen, and Bates for the High School...
...field by the Amherst freshmen. The Amherst freshman nine last year was a remarkably good one, and we understand that Amherst has one this year that would be a good match for our freshman nine. The novelty of a game with the Amherst freshmen would surely attract and interested crowd, and the game would be a financial success for the management, as well as a means of getting excellent practice for the nine, so we hope our suggestion will be favorably received...
...take this opportunity to remind all freshmen who ride bicycles, that the Bicycle Club has very few members from eighty-eight, and earnestly desires more. Now that the time for riding has come, all lovers of the sport who appreciate a lively run through a pleasant country with a crowd of jolly companions, ought to join the club for their own sakes, if not to support the club. The admission fee to the club is only three dollars, and the member has the satisfaction of knowing that he personally is going to derive pleasure from his contribution, and that...