Word: seventh
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...field in a beautiful rush and made a touchdown, from which he kicked a goal. Time 24 minutes. Technology started the ball from the middle of the field, but immediately lost it, and Harding made a rush like the last one through the entire Technology eleven and scored the seventh touchdown for Harvard. Time 27 minutes. Harding kicked the goal. Score, 38-0. The Harvard team blocked off well in these two rushes. Technology again started the ball from the centre of the field, but Harvard soon got it and Dexter and Van Schaick advanced it twenty-yards and Harding...
...kicked a goal. Time 25 minutes. Exeter kicked from the middle of the field and Sears returned. Harvard got the ball and Poore rushed forty yards and carried the ball across the line, but lost it behind the goal posts. Sears dropped on the ball, however, and scored the seventh touchdown for Harvard, from which Fitzhugh kicked a goal. Time 27 minutes. This is the last point that was scored. Final score: Harvard, 39; Exeter...
...first number of the seventh volume of the Monthly gives promise that under the new board of editors, the interests of the paper will not be neglected. The articles are well written and are worthy of publication. The number as a whole, however, is not as interesting to the general reader as some of its predecessors. The work and thought of the essayist is given prominence almost to the exclusion of the writers of fiction. We have little fault to find with the matter presented but we think that if something in a lighter vein had been introduced among...
...time and won the championship of the college league. Harvard played a better game than that of the Saturday before, but inability to bat Stagg was the great defect in their play. Yale's base-running was superb, and won her the game. Harvard failed to score until the seventh inning, when three hits and an error by Hunt gave her three runs-none earned. Both Stagg and Bates pitched well. The score...
...representative team. The batting on the Harvard nine was well distributed, every man but one getting a hit. The batting of the Beacons was confined to two men, Richardson batting hard every time he stepped to the plate Boyden started in to pitch for Harvard, but retired in the seventh, Bates taking his place in the box. The Beacons made two good double plays Willard caught two difficult fouls. McAloon played excellently at short for the Beacons. Egan's umpiring was poor, the Beacon's suffering the most from his decisions. The score...