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Word: wildness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...made a pretty double play with Dean, putting out Case. In the second inning Trafford was hit by the pitcher, reached third on battery errors, and came home on Upton's sacriflice. In the next inning Linn made a hit and brought in Dean, who reached first on Stearns' wild throw, second on a steal, and third on a passed ball. In the fifth inning Harvard made five runs on two bases on balls, three steals, Stearns' error, Mason's and Upton's sacrlfices, a fearfully wild pitch, and hits by Howland and Trafford. In the sighth inning four more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Base Ball. | 4/17/1890 | See Source »

Harvard defeated the Phillips Andover Academy nine yesterday afternoon by a score of eleven to one. The Academy team played a very good game and made a far better showing than Exeter. Dalzell, a brother of the Yale pitcher, was in the box, and he was very wild, giving seven men their bases on balls, besides letting in several runs by wild pitches. Harvard did not hit freely, however. On the contrary the batting was weak throughout, a total of only seven hits being made in the eight innings that were played. In the field Harvard did much better...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Base Ball. | 4/17/1890 | See Source »

...nine secured a run in the first inning on Downer's wild throw battery errors, and Dayis' hit. In the third inning they made two hits, which, aided by Bates' and Howland's errors, netted two runs, and two unearned runs. In the next inning Harvard went to pieces again and the B. A. A. got four unearned runs. Bates and Dean made errors in the next inning, Shores made a single, Burke a double, and three more runs were scored. This ended the visitors' run-getting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Base Ball. | 4/16/1890 | See Source »

Earned runs, Harvard 2, B A A 3; two base hits, Burke, Upton; base on balls, Trafford, Upton, Stetson (2), Downer; first base on errors, Harvard 6, B A A 5; struck out, Campbell, Slade, Davis, Carleton, Chase, Burke, Howland, Dean (2); passed balls, Howland 2; wild pitches, Downer 2; flies caught, Harvard 5, B A A 5; fouls caught, Harvard 3, B A A 3; out on bases, Harvard 6, B A A 1; left on bases, Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Base Ball. | 4/16/1890 | See Source »

...Chorus of Wagner," by W. M. Moody, has something of the grandeur in thought of one of Wagner's conceptions, but is extremely unmusical. Some of its epithets are poorly chosen, and it seems rather strange for the "wild eye" to continue "glaring" after its owner has become "shriveled, dead." Mr. 'H. McCulloch's "Ballad" is a pretty fancy well expressed. The best of the poetical contributions is Mr. H. Bates' "Somewhere." It is imaglnative and melodious, and makes a pleasing and original poem out of what might have seemed a commonplace subject...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Monthly. | 4/16/1890 | See Source »

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