Word: errors
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...yesterday, breaking the school's record of nine straight games won. A triple by J. C. Bancroft in the eighth inning with Owen on first scored the winning run for the Yearlings. The game was fast and the best played that 1923 has staged this season, with only one error committed by each team...
...yearlings only once seriously threatened. In the first of the fifth two successive home runs by H. L. Pratt and C. H. Brown, an error by G. L. Van Bergen and a single by J. M. Blair gave them a temporary ascendancy of one run. Both teams slammed the pitchers mercilessly. The teams lined up as follows: 1920. 1923. Van Bergen, Hoffman, s.s. l.f., Ross Ladd, Cary, 1b. c.f., Pratt Hill, 3b. 3b., Browne Woods, Ward, r.f. 1b., Flint McCouch, Calligan, l.f. r.f., Saxe Lloyd, e. s.s., de Gersdorff Dickson, Stubbs, r.f. 2b., Dunscombe Falvey, 2b. c., Keeler Johnson...
...until the sixth inning that the visitors scored their first tally: Clough, who had been walked, came in on successive errors by Scott and Banes. A sacrifice by Cleveland in the next inning brought in Bemis with the second tally. Good pitching by Russell in the ninth nipped an incipient last inning rally in the bud when Smith, having gained first on an error by J. M. Martin '22, came in with the last tally for the visitor's on a sacrifice by Bemis. The next man up, however, flied out to Martin and terminated the game...
Team B won the game in the fourth inning by scoring six runs with two men out. With C. A. Clark, Jr., Occ. on second and R. B. Shaw '21 on first, as the result of a single and an error, C. L. Harrison, Occ., lost control and passed three batters forcing in two runs. C. J. Mason '22 and L. A. Hallock '22 followed with two base hits and T. H. Gammack. '20 brought in Mason with the sixth run by a single...
...Leach's conclusions from his own reasoning are enough to show his error. He admits that the Constitution guarantees freedom of speech and of the press. But he says, in the case of Bolshevists "we (and I suppose that here he means to constitute himself the judge of what the public thinks) have been forced to realize that these principles (i.e., freedom of speech and the press) have reacted to the detriment of the public welfare which they were purposed to benefit." The obvious moral is that in the case of Bolshevists the public weal (or Mr. Leach's interpretation...