Word: fourthly
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Harvard lost the fourth game with Princeton yesterday on Holmes Field, after as exciting a contest as is ever seen on the ball field. From start to finish the game was closely contested and abounded with brilliant plays, although the playing was very uncertain and errors were numerous among the Harvard men. The game in many respects was a repetition of the famous sixteeninning game which Princeton won here a few weeks ago, but it differed from the fact that yesterday Princeton held the lead from the start until Harvard tied the score in the sixth inning. Harvard played...
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Edward Henry Fennessy, 96, of Boston, rows at number 5. Fennessy prepared at St. Paul's School and, like Goodrich and Sprague, obtained his first knowledge of rowing on the Shattuck's. This is his fourth year in teh 'Varsity boat. During his Freshman year he stroked the crew, but the two succeeding years he rowed at 7. Fennessy is 23 years old, is 5 ft. 11 in. in height, and weighs...
...nine will play Princeton this afternoon at 3 o'clock on Holmes Field. This is the fourth game of the series, and if Harvard wins, there will...
Brown crossed the plate first in the fourth inning, when Dean's error, a hit, and three bases on balls gave two runs. In the next inning Fultz made a home run, although Rand almost caught his hit. The last run was made in the ninth inning. Phillips's fly would have been easily caught by Rand but fell into the willows. He scored on a sacrifice and a single. Harvard did not reach third except in the fifth inning, when Scannell made a two-base hit and Burgess sacrificed. Clarkson, however, hit a fly to Brady...