Word: grounds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...will be used, enabling any man to shoot two scores in an afternoon if he so desires. Entrance fees are $2, and all who wish to enter will send their entries before Monday to C. A. Hardy, captain, 26 Read's Block. Entrance fees will be paid on the ground before entering the match...
...score of 51 to 27. A great deal of credit for the game is due to the bowling of Clark and Lippincott. There was no large individual score on either side, but the runs were pretty well scattered. The scoring was very slow, owing to the softness of the ground. Harvard won the toss and went in first to bat. As Lowell only scored 27 runs, less than 60 per cent. of the Harvard score, they started their second innings immediately after the first was over. Owing to the weakness of Harvard's bowling they scored 100 runs for only...
Harvard's inability to keep the ball on the ground gave the Dartmouth fielders many chances at fly balls; McCornack made four remarkable catches in left field...
...carefully written and thoughtful analysis of the "Dramas of Herman Sudermann," by Gaillard T. Lapsley. After critically reviewing the principal plays of that author, the writer characterizes Suderman as powerful, though ineffective through diffusion. The coarseness and obsceneness so evident in the plays are excused on the ground that Sudermann, like all Germans, was not so sensitive to this sort of thing as are the English speaking people...
...candidates for the cricket eleven practiced at Beacon Park yesterday for the first time. This arrangement is a great improvement over that of former years, for a good pitch has been secured and there is no need of stretching matting over the ground. Beacon Park may be reached on foot in about 15 minutes from Harvard Square via Boylston street, or by Allston car from Central Square...