Word: scored
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Cornell sophomores beat the freshmen at base-ball, Saturday, by a score of 25 to 2. In the first inning the sophomores made 22 runs...
...tournament was continued yesterday and the playing was very good, much better than on the first day. There was quite a large attendance of spectators, and hearty applause greeted many of the fine plays that were made. Appended is the score: Singles. Second round (continued from Monday) H. M. Sears vs. Tailer, 6-3, 5-6, 10-8; Federhen vs. Hamlin, 6-3, 5-6, 6-2. Third round. H. M. Sears vs. Lord, 6-5, 6-0; P. S. Sears vs. H. M. Sears, 6-5, 6-4. Doubles. First round. Kuhn and Keep vs. Lord and Snow...
...prepare trust worthy and thorough interpreters for the diplomatic, consular, and military service, the civil officers and missionaries who have to deal with the different nations found in Russia, and mercantile agents who have to attend to the import and export trade. A Russian professor himself speaking over a score of languages says...
...small number of freshmen accompanied their team to Southboro yesterday to see it beaten after a wretched game. Their opponents were much lighter than they, and should have been easily handled; but the freshmen seemed afraid of the ball and muffed and passed wretchedly. St. Marks scored in the first half pretty much as it pleased, but '89 took a decided brace in in the last part of the second half which would have won the game had it been begun sooner. At the close of the second half the score stood 12 to 9 against '89. Goodhue...
...urge every student to be constantly on the alert to prevent just such accidents as the one of yesterday morning. A very little carelessness on the part of one man may bring terrible results upon a score of his fellow undergraduates. A student rooming in one of the large dormitories in the yard is absolutely at the mercy of the men around him. As the weakest link in a chain must be taken as the measure of its strength, so must the safety of a hundred students be computed on the basis of the habits of the most heedless...