Word: score
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...extremely one-sided. True, we were almost beaten in the second Dartmouth game, but the only reason Dartmouth got the lead in the first place was on careless playing due to overconfidence. We must learn how to play an uphill game-to be as careful and steady when the score is against us as when it is for us. Our games with Yale and Princeton can be won only by strong, uniform play. This has not been wanting in former years, and will probably not be wanting this year, even without professional practice. The nine deserves much credit...
...baseball match between the Athletics and Memorials, each composed of waiters in Memorial Hall, the former nine was victorious by a score of 10 to 8. The battery of the Athletics was Stewart and Crawford; of the Memorials, Pidgeon and Carrington...
...managers of the nine to the inadequate police arrangements at Jarvis at every ball game. The inordinate longing of the average mucker to "steal in" never ceases, and he is eager to put his skill in this line into operation at every opportunity. The result is that a score or so of the Cambridge youth gain access to the grounds every afternoon that the nine plays. A little more care ought to be exercised until the nine gets on Holmes. A couple more policemen would obviate the difficulty, and the cost would be but a slight advance on that...
Harvard presented as battery, Boyden and Howland. Boyden was effective and was well supported by Howland who played a fine game throughout. The batting of Knowlton and Campbell was one of the features of the game. The umpiring was the best seen here this year. The score...
...There has been a great advance in mutual good feeling between 'town and gown' even within a score of years. A Cambridge policeman does not now represent 'all that is antagonistic to human interests,' even in the eyes of the freshest undergraduate. Harvard men and Cambridge society have very pleasant relations, and the annual graduation exercises of the city high school in Sanders theatre represent much more fairly the existing good feeling than does the petty criticism of Harvard as a foreign and non-taxpaying corporation...