Word: errorful
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...which most freshman teams make sooner or later in their career. They have fallen into the delusion that they are practicing each day for their own amusement and do not seem to realize that they are to turn out a team that must meet the Yale freshmen. Because the error is a common one, it is not the less blamable It is for the freshmen to decide at once whether they will begin to make an earnest effort to win the coming contest by hard practice each day, or whether they will indulge in a halfhour of playfulness, such...
...report published in yesterday's issue of the CRIMSON stating that Harvard's representative, Mr. Sears, had won the championship in singles in the tennis tournament, although premature, was nevertheless destined to prove true. The error was, that in reading the hurried and hasty dispatch received by the CRIMSON late night before last, the fact that Columbia's representative had yet to play Mr. Sears, was entirely overlooked. But "all's well that ends well" and the thanks and congratulations of the college are due Mr. Sears for his splendid work at New Haven...
...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...
Harvard met the famous New Jersey nine Saturday and prevented it from getting a run. The game was the prettiest played here this year, Harvard making no error outside the battery and the visitors only two. Gallivan was hurt in the eighth and was obliged to retire, Luce taking his place at second. Howland made a fine catch of Jos. Reilly's fly in the fourth. Flynn played excellently at short for the visitors, accepting five chances...
...lead was increased four runs by hits of Campbell, Boyden and Howland and a base on balls. In the eighth, two more runs were made from hits by Gallivan and Boyden, and in the ninth inning a three-base hit by Knowlton, four bases on balls and an error by right field enabled Harvard to make a total of thirteen runs...