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Word: wildness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...third inning, after Murphy had flied out, Lynch made a safe hit and got to third on a wild pitch. Bird knocked a high foul to Alward who muffed it. Then Bird made another hit in the same direction, but inside the line, and Lynch came home. Bird took second on O'Brien's sacrifice, and scored on a passed ball and error by Trafford. Parks got his base on balls and Moore hit safely. Lezott sent a long fly to centre which looked safe, but Hallowell caught it prettily and the side was out. For Harvard, Bates reached third...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard 2; Worcester 6. | 4/21/1891 | See Source »

Brown failed to score until the third inning. In the first Harvard made a run on scratch hits by Hovey and Trafford, a stolen base, and a wild throw by Thurston. In the third we scored on Mendenhall's bad muff of Hallowell's hit, a stolen base and a wild pitch. Brown went to work with a vim in this inning. Mendenhall hit safely and stole second. Woodcock lifted the ball well over the right field fence. Frothingham was slow to pick it up, and both men came in. Then Jones struck out. Tenney got a base on balls...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard vs. Brown. | 4/18/1891 | See Source »

...first man to come to the bat in the ninth was Weeks. Howe, who had taken Bates' place in the seventh, gave him a base on balls. Thurston struck out for the third time. Two wild pitches in succession advanced Weeks to third. Steere hit safely and Weeks came in. Steere stole second, and Mendenhall's hit advanced him to third. Mendenhall stole second. Woodcock, who had already made a home run and a single, came to the bat. He was the third man in succession to hit safely, and Steere and Mendenhall came in. In the confusion Upton threw...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard vs. Brown. | 4/18/1891 | See Source »

...Messer, Weeks (2), Cook, Upton, Bates. First base on errors, Brown 2, Harvard 3. Struck out, Tenney, Magill, Thurston (3), Steere (2), Dean, Hallowell (2), Trafford, Alward, Cook (2), Upton, Bates. Stolen bases, Woodcock, Tenney, Messer, Steere, Mendenhall (2), Dean (2), Hallowell, Hovey, Trafford, Frothingham, Alward (2), Cook, Bates. Wild pitches, Bates, Howe (2), Woodcock. Out on bases, Brown 3, Harvard 2. Left on bases, Brown 6, Harvard 9. Time, 2 h. 10 m. Umpires, A. Clarkson and Hunt...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard vs. Brown. | 4/18/1891 | See Source »

...term "heroic" is applied to it, not in the sense of a military hero, but in that of a perfect man. The four movements depict man's various sensations: in the first, youthful and active emotions, followed by the mournful and solemn grief in the magnificent funeral march, the wild impetuosity of the scherzo, and the blending of all the emotions in the finale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Symphony Concert. | 4/17/1891 | See Source »

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