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Word: brought (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...cause of Pennsylvania's first run. At the bat, he made a home run, one of the longest hits made on Soldiers Field this year. Devens, who has hitherto been weak at the bat, showed a great improvement, making a two-base hit and two singles, all of which brought in runs. Clarkson allowed only two hits, struck out eight men, and was remarkably steady with men on bases. At times he was wild, and gave three bases on balls, but with steady support would have scored a shut out. He was much harder to hit than at any other...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD, 11; U. OF P., 3. | 6/10/1901 | See Source »

...Fincke's sacrifice and scored on Devens's hit. In the sixth inning singles by Frantz, Stillman, Devens and Clarkson and a series of errors of Collier, White, Gawthrop and Brown gave Harvard four unearned runs. In the next inning Clark reached first on Brown's error, and Reid brought him in with his long home run. Harvard scored the two last runs in the eighth inning. Coolidge got a base on balls, and scored on Clarkson's three bagger. Clarkson came home on Wendell's out at first...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD, 11; U. OF P., 3. | 6/10/1901 | See Source »

...suffering, the writer says, from the lack of a building devoted exclusively to the philosophical department--a building in which all the philosophical classes, now scattered through the different recitation halls, and all the classes in psychological research, now cramped in inadequate laboratories in Dane Hall, might be brought together. "Such a home," Professor Munsterberg writes, "would give us first, of course, the room and the external opportunities for work on every plane; it would give us also the dignity and the repose, the unity and comradeship of a philosophical academy. It would give us the inspiration resulting from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Graduates' Magazine. | 6/4/1901 | See Source »

...second on Paine's muff of a throw, and to third on Putnam's out. George hit a slow ball to Barry, Paine muffed the throw and Coolidge scored. Harvard did not score again until the eighth inning. Then four successive singles by Reid, Frantz, Stillman and Devens, brought in the last...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD, 3; BROWN, 1. | 5/31/1901 | See Source »

Since leaving Harvard it has often occurred to me that Baccalaureate Sunday, Class Day, and Commencement might be brought within three or four days of each other, and thus graduates might be given a greater inducement to go to Cambridge in June than they have at present. As the days are now arranged, there is such a long intermission between the first and last events of the closing year that men who go to the Yale game or are in Cambridge for Class Day often cannot wait till Commencement, and many do not think it worth while to go from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 5/28/1901 | See Source »

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