Word: ever
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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After the first inning, when Harvard through Easton's weakness in the box scored five runs, the game was a superb exhibition of baseball-the best perhaps that has ever been given on Holmes Field. Almost in every inning some phenomenal play was made. It was not until the fifth that Princeton was able to score, but then Paine's unsteadiness gave her four runs. One run was added in the eighth, which tied the score. Then for five innings neither side could make a run. Even when Princeton broke the spell by scoring, Harvard was equal to the emergency...
...track was in good condition, fast times were made, and the meeting was one of the best meetings the I. C. A. A. A. A. has ever held. Five intercollegiate records were broken; in the 100 yards and the 220 yards dashes, in the pole vault, the running high jump and the half mile...
...Scannell '97, of Jamaica Plain, Mass., prepared at Boston Latin School, where he played first base. He has caught on the 'Varsity ever since he has been in college. Age 21, height 5 ft. 9 in., weight 182 pounds...
...heartily endorse the timely suggestion offered by our correspondent this morning. The old custom which he speaks of was a very good one and used to be a powerful incentive to the Crew. Why the custom was ever abandoned it is difficult to see. It probably died away gradually with the subsiding interest taken here in athletics, and the same deplorable apathy which has come over all our athletic interests in recent years has prevented its renewal. Now that we are beginning to rouse ourselves again and to see how wretchedly indifferent we have been, let us bring back...
...AIDA" at the Castle Square Theatre is one of the most magnificent operatic spectacles ever seen in Boston. The remarkable fact about the production is that the prices remain 25 and 50 cents for all seats, while the cost of staging the piece was twice that for any other Castle Square opera. These artists were engaged at enormous salaries: Mary Linck, Anna Lichter, Fatmah Diard, William Mertens, Charles O. Bassett, C. William Schuster, W. H. Clarke, John Beall. It is not surprising that the patronage of the week has been very large, and patrons have been enthusiastic in their praise...