Word: sixteen
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Harvard outplayed Yale at every point. Howe and Upton played beautifully, Howe striking out sixteen men and giving but one base on balls. Harvard did not make an error after the second inning, nor did Yale after the third...
Harvard defeated the Williams College nine on Holmes Field yesterday by a score of sixteen to five. The game was characterized by Harvard's hard batting. The men also played a clean fielding game. The Williams nine fielded loosely, and their pitchers were far from effective. Cummings was in the box for Harvard in the first four innings, and he was rather wild, giving five bases on balls. Downer was substituted in the fifth inning and he held the visitors down fairly well. The Harvard team was considerably changed from the last game; Mason was tried in left field; Soule...
...mass meeting of the students of Columbia college, held last Thursday, the new system regulating athletics was adopted. All questions of athletic policy and the entire control of the finances will be in the hands of the Board of Directors of the Union. This consists of sixteen men, eight graduates elected by the alumni, and eight undergraduates elected as the students, two from each branch of athletics...
...field on Washington: Heights, provided a sufficient sum should be subscribed by the grounds in condition. President Low announced that $17,530 has been raised which will be quite sufficient to put the grounds in repair. The plans for the new organization provide for an executive committee of sixteen, eight graduates and eight undergraduates, which will have supervision over athletic sports. Each of the four leading sports of the college, rowing, baseball, foot ball and track athletics, have an association which now elects one member of the Advisory committee. Hereafter each association will be replaced by a standing committee elected...
...March Atlantic has an even more literary character that usual. Four articles only, out of the sixteen of the table of contents, relate to anything else than literature, relate to anything else than literature. These are, "Dangers from Electricity," by Professor John Trowbridge, "Woman's Suffrage Pro and Con," "A Forgotten Episode," and "Lottering Through the Paris Exposition." These four evidently are the politics, science and art to which with literature, the Atlantic announces its devotion. The woman's suffrage paper is slightly "pro" and very much "con," but produces nothing new in argument, or any old truth...