Word: poorness
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...both colleges, until Yale has passed from under the ban placed upon her by her faculty. It is not at all likely that another meeting of this kind will ever take place, at least not for many years. To have, then, the championship undecided, would be a very poor and unsatisfactory ending to the season's work for both Princeton and Harvard. As this is the first and last chance for our freshmen to measure their strength with the Princeton freshmen, we would add our earnest request to the Athletic Committee to be a little lenient in this case...
...Malley's being for three bases. Not a single freshman struck out. For the juniors, Linfield did the best fielding, having seven chances and accepting them all, making two or three phenominal plays. Frothingham made one fine catch in left field to compensate for his poor work of the rest of the game. O'Malley and Griffin played well for the freshmen. It is safe to say once more that the freshmen have more than fair chances of beating the Princeton freshmen a week from today...
...occasional run for the rest of the game, Collamore kept '94 well in hand until the seventh when they added five more runs. W. Clark, Hapgood, Lowell and E. Clark all hit hard, and Dinsmore and Hickey also did good work with the stick. A mid all the poor playing, Linfield managed to keep his head and play a thoroughly creditable game. Manley's work was in sharp contrast, as he made six errors in nine chances...
...love story, but it is well worked up and keeps up the interest to the end. "Their Wedding" by Edward G. Knoblauch is a story of the rivalry of the two belles of a country town. It is amusing though very improbable. A "Triolet" by H. H. is poor. The "College Kodaks" are very good, best of all is the fourth. The second and the last are the poorest. "The Artistic Temperament" by Townsend Walsh is one of the best things of the number. It is a story of a troup of wandering actors and is told in a bright...
...number is "New England Art at the World's Fair." Its principal attraction is the long list of illustrations which are copies of the pictures sen+++ to the Fair. The short stories of the number, "A Professional Lover" and "At the Meeting of the Circle" are, as usual, poor. "Milton as an Educator" is a reprint of an address by Phillips Brooks...