Word: field
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Eighty-nine and Ninety-one played off the tie in the lacrosse championship series yesterday afternoon, and Eighty-nine won by a score of 3 to 0. Ninety-one came to the field with only ten men, and Eighty-nine, who might have played with their full team, dropped two men to make the sides equal. Eighty-nine forced the playing from the start and kept the ball in their opponents' territory most of the time; but Ninety-one's defence prevented the other side from scoring for about 26 minutes. Griffing then secured the ball at one side...
Harvard defeated University of Pennsylvania yesterday afternoon in a well-played game. Pennsylvania made several very costly errors, while Harvard played a perfect fielding game with the exception of one wild pitch by Boyden. Neither side scored during the first four innings. In the third inning, with Quackenboss on second, Howland hit a fly to short centre field which was captured by Hamme after a hard run. He threw Quackenboss out at second, making a brilliant double play. In the fifth inning, Harvard scored two runs on a single by Knowlton, a double by Quackenboss and errors by Nellins...
Pennsylvania's only run was made in the sixth inning on a hit by Lizt to left field. The ball struck the cinder track and bounded high over Knowlton's head, giving Liszt two bases. He stole third and went home on Boyden's wild pitch...
HARVARD CRICKET CLUB.- The following men will play against Pennsylvania to-morrow at 10 o'clock on Holmes Field: R. D. Brown, R. W. Frost, G. T. Quimby, S. Dexter, T. W. Balch, C. G. Parker, G. T. Keyes, L. Sullivan, L. H. Morgan, G. Norman, S. A. Bayer and W. S. Ellis...
...honor of American scholarship, and to represent our interests in the field as well at home, it is proposed to furnish an American student to aid in the explorations by the Egypt Exploration Fund of England and America. It is also most important to have one of our countrymen who is versed not only in Egyptology and in the recent 'results,' but who is personally acquainted with our work in situ. Mr. Griffith, the English student, has, in two or three seasons of work, attained an enviable place among archaelogical explores, and his investigations at the British Museum, in connection...