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...playing of the game was done by Allen, who held Nichols swift delivery with perfect ease. Winslow pitched well during the rest of the game, and was efficiently supported by Crocker. The Tremonts' fielding was very poor, and the nine was evidently demoralized by the absence of Fowler, their regular pitcher. Their best playing was done by Sullivan and Wood-man. For Harvard, Phillips and Winslow did the best batting, and White led the Tremonts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BASE BALL. | 4/14/1884 | See Source »

...made was on the whole gratifying to their supporters, the several hundred students who shivered on the benches of Jarvis. Of course it is impossible to make any decided criticism of the play after only one game. Still there are some things which attracted attention. The work of the regular battery seemed almost faultless and is an improvement over the performances of last year. Thus early are the good effects of the winter's cage work evident. The little fielding which was required of the men was almost perfect and if continued during the remainder of the season it will...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/14/1884 | See Source »

...feeling annually aroused by the time fixed for the regular spring vacation certainly deserves to meet more consideration than it has hitherto received. After the work of the mid-year examinations it is but natural that everyone should feel pretty well tired out, but no attention whatever is paid to this fact; recitations continue regularly, and as a result little work, if any, is done for a week or two by the students. Then, just as everything gets in running order again, a vacation comes to break in upon the work, and necessitates an entirely new start. Such a state...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/10/1884 | See Source »

...Clarke, '84, takes an occasional row with the crew, but will not begin regular training until the first of May. The crew, though giving great promise of success, has not yet reached perfection. The men are not rowing with enough uniformity. Those on the starboard side often fail to draw their oars clear through, and in the middle of the boat there is a break in the time, occasioned by number five, who does not heave back his shoulders with the others. A few more individual "peculiarities" are noticeable. No. 2 shoots his hands out slowly. No. 3 dips...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CREWS. | 4/10/1884 | See Source »

...those days there was almost always some crowd of students using the grounds when the regular team did not want them, but such recreation was uncertain and infrequent. Even at that time there was a cry for more room. In the fall the freshman eleven needed another field and had to resort part of the time to a distant field kindly loaned by an interested gentleman. In the spring time the lacrosse twelve. badly cramped in their narrow quarters, were also clamoring for more room that their increasing numbers might be accommodated. As was said before there was scarcely...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A PLEA FOR MORE ATHLETIC GROUNDS. | 4/1/1884 | See Source »

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