Word: errors
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...passed ball took Hunting to second, a bad throw by Henshaw moved him to third and he came in on another passed ball. Moran and Mahr struck out and Bent flied out to Mumford. For Harvard Wiestling hit safely, Foster got his base on balls and Campbell by an error in left field. Willard hit sharply to short-stop who fumbled and then threw the ball down into the tennis courts and four runs came in. The next three men at the bat were retired in short order...
...game opened with Harvard at the bat. Wiestling led off with a hit, stole second, obtained his third on a passed ball and came in on an error by Wood who fumbled Henshaw's hit to short stop. Campbell had struck out and Foster flied out to Stone in the left field. Willard got his base on balls but was left at first by Boyden's being assisted out by Smith. Technology got in two hits in this inning but failed to score. The second inning Harvard was shut out while Technology succeeded in getting one man on third...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: Your editorial of yesterday contains an error for which the learned author and the reviewer of Lawrie's "Rise and Early Constitution of Universities" are responsible. Your editorial approves of the statement that "until the fourteenth century there was no conscious founding of universities." This is an error; for thirteen of the twenty-six universities that existed in the year 1300 were consciously founded as studia generalia, the mediaeval conception of the modern university. Three of the eleven Italian universities that existed in the beginning of the fourteenth century were conscious foundations: Naples in 1224, Rome...
...second correspondent, who, it would seem, is conversant in scientific affairs, sent us a long communication in regard to the misstatements of his predecessor. These corrections were perfectly correct and justifiable, but there is a question about the propriety of his intimating that the lecturer was "sadly in error." The latter is thus brought into a controversy in which he takes no interest and which is wholly out of his province The remarks which he made in the philosophy course from which our first correspondent derived his "facts," were based on the highest authority, such as the journal...
...writer of the article in yesterday's CRIMSON either misrepresented the lecturer from whom he got his "facts" or else that learned gentleman was sadly in error...