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Word: badness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...cited the city of Cambridge as an example of what unity can do, where two years ago there were one hundred and twenty-two saloons and today perhaps nineteen. Finally he said that if anything was to be accomplished there could not be a congregation of good or bad who had determined to help the bad but that the University was an individual which could not be divided and the degradation or uplifting of a part of its members could not help but degrade or uplift the whole and that every one by his own life was bound...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Total Abstinence League. | 10/17/1888 | See Source »

...ball was then kicked and Harvard had it down. Perry made a run of fifteen yards, and Lee followed with a run of twenty yards. He injured his hand in the fall and Hunnewell took his place. Fitzhugh gained five yards, but Technology got the ball on a bad pass. Hunnewell fumbled the ball from a kick and Technology had it down on Harvard's twenty-five-yard line. Technology gained ten yards and then the ball went to Harvard on four downs, on the fifteen-yard line. Fitzhugh and Perry gained twenty yards, when the ball again went...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard, 18; Technology, 0. | 10/15/1888 | See Source »

Yale's class races were rowed Saturday afternoon on Lake Saltonstall, and in spite of the bad weather were very successful. The single scull race for the Cleveland cup was declared off, as the two contestants fouled before finishing. The mile race between '92 and 91 S. was won by '92 in 5m. 55s. The two-mile race between...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Result of Yale's Class Races. | 10/15/1888 | See Source »

...cricket eleven went to Medford on Saturday afternoon to play the Mystic C. C. The Mystic captain, winning the toss, decided to make the best of a bad wicket, owing to the rain, by going in first. Smith and Kidger were the first two to face the bowling of Ellis and Bohlen. With the score at only 5, Smith was clean bowled by Bohlen. E. Greaves, the next man, after driving Bohlen for 3, was caught out by Balch at short slip off Ellis. Ellis followed this up by bowling Carmichael for only 4. Then DeWolfe joined Kidger...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard vs. Mystic. | 10/8/1888 | See Source »

...Clark, Hawes. Berry, R. Agassiz, Putnam, Travis, Barter, Henry and Brooks; for quarterback, Mann, Neff, Preston; for half-back, Hill, Draper, Carpenter; for full-back, Barter and Forbes. The men are all unusually light and will have to work hard to make up for this disadvantage in weight. The bad weather has probably kept some men from coming out for practice. In all probability more candidates will present themselves when the weather is less threatening. The freshmen, however, must not wait for clear weather. The time for practice is short, and every day, fair or rainy, will be needed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Freshman Foot-Ball. | 10/3/1888 | See Source »

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