Word: got
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...English occupation of Egypt was unnecessary.- (a) Egypt was making wonderful advances-(1) In government: J. E. Bowen, in Fol. SciQuar. (June, 1896).- (2) In public works: Ibid.- (3) in education.- (x) Just before English control (1882) had 4817 schools: McCoan, chap. x.- (4) In revenue.- (x) Before England got control of Egypt's finances she owned a large part of Suez Canal, from which she derived a revenue to pay off the national debt: Ibid.- (b) The good of civilization did not demand it.- (1) Mehemet Ali had made travel safe and made Egypt a responsible nation...
...strongly and played much better than Edwards in the first set, winning rather easily, 6-3. In the second, Edwards showed marked improvement and placed beautifully, making Seaver run all over the court. Seaver lost confidence and did not play as well as in the first, and Edwards got the set 6-1. The third set was the closest of the match. Edwards won a lead of 3-1. Then Seaver improved and in turn led at 5-3. By very pretty placing and running up to the net, Edwards tied the score, and finally...
Dartmouth played a cool steady game throughout. The men played especially well whenever Harvard got anyone on bases. Tabor pitched a steady though not a very strong game...
...third Paine got a base on balls and scored on Haughton's three-base hit to left field. Another score was added in the fourth when Burgess hit safely, reaching third on Adams's error. He scored on T. Stevenson's hit over third base...
...scored in the second, but in the third the Freshmen made five runs almost entirely on errors by Somerville and a hit by Litchfield. Somerville also made two runs in this inning on two hits an error by second base and a base on balls. In the fifth Robinson got to second on errors and came in on Mains hit. In the seventh the Freshmen made another run on hits by Morse and Litchfield, and in the ninth three more on hits by Litchfield, McCall and Galbraith, while Somerville made two chiefly by Ninety-nine's errors...