Word: resulted
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...playing of the Crescents was a beautiful exhibition, and the result of the game was never in doubt. Harvard was greatly handicapped by the loss of the regular goal-keeper, Sands, whose eyes gave out early in the Stevens game, on Friday. A new man who was entirely without experience in that position had to be put in Sand's place. In its attack, however, the Harvard team was much stronger. Beecher played, on the whole, the best game...
...result of the dual games with Yale last Saturday must be especially discouraging to the University because it was so unexpected. After defeating Pennsylvania the week before in a remarkably well-contested series of events, the track team went down to New Haven, as was generally thought, with an even chance of winning. As it turned out, about eight or ten men of the thirty or more who went down did what was expected of them in the games, while the rest, to say the least, fell below expectations. Now, without trying to apologize for the poor showing or make...
...dual games with Pennsylvania held Saturday afternoon on Holmes Field resulted in a victory for Harvard by 57 points to 55. When the games were finished the score was a tie, but Orton had been protested for fouling Fenno in the half-mile run and, the protest being sustained, one point was transferred from Pennsylvania to Harvard. The games were probably the most interesting ever held in Cambridge, being full of hard fought contests and leaving the result in doubt to the very...
...This same protest and consequent disqualification of one of Pennsylvania's men in the half mile run seems to have aroused much dissatisfaction; in fact, some, apparently, would rather have had the games a tie than win them on a foul. While it is of course, unfortunate that the result of the whole meeting should depend upon this, we feel that the protest and decision were perfectly just. All will agree that in order to make competition on the track fair there must be certain rules governing the contestants with this end in view; and if a man enters...
...oarsman (who has, contrary to the general supposition, given his services free of charge), has adopted a somewhat shorter and faster stroke than that taught by Mr. Lehmann, and has gone through an unusually hard course of training for a class crew. If the crew wins, it will probably result in changing, to a certain extent, the work of class crews in the future...