Word: errors
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Both teams scored twice in the fourth inning. For the Radio men two singles, an error, a stolen base, and an infield out, brought in the runs. For the University, Wolverton singled. Hallowell walked. Ward flied out. The base-runners advanced on an infield out and scored on J. S. Mosle '20's hit to right...
...University made the score five--all in the eighth. Evans singled and went to third on Wolverton's hit. Hallowell reached first on an error, filling the bases. Ward's timely hit scored two runs. On Hoffman's hit, however, Hallowell was cut off at the plate. This was the last score for the University...
...were caught off base by the pitcher. Peirson, who, with Gammack formed the University battery, held Portland to four safeties and might have scored a shut-out except for poor support. Wolverton, who replaced Captain Gross at shortstop, played an excellent game in the infield, accepting six chances without error. A double play, Hallo-well to Bright to Johnson, was a feature of the day's play. Dickson at second base made a very pretty catch of Burn's fly in right field in the first inning...
...walked, was advanced to second by Baldwin's sacrifice, went to third on Meehan's out and scored on Frothingham's single. The University team entered the seventh inning with the score 9 to 6 against them. Two bases on balls, four hits; two of them doubles, one error and a sacrifice fly, made the final score...
...Government to act. The forceful parts of the report are those upholding the right and the advantage of public discussion of the objects of a war and the methods of conducting it, and pointing out the weakness of persecution as a "means for extirpating or repressing honest error, however grave and dangerous the error may be." The report condemns the dismissal of "a distinguished man of science," meaning Professor Cattell, as involving "a disregard of all the essential distinctions" upon which the report insists. --New York Evening Post