Word: gould
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Amherst was first at the bat. Burns struck out; Gould flied out to Linn; Hunt, after making a hit, was thrown out at second. Dean got his base on balls and stole second; he was caught between second and third. Linn and Howland got bases on balls; they were advanced each a base on Mason's grounder. which the third baseman fumbled, and came in on Lacey's wild throw. Mason took second on the attempt to put Howland out at the plate, took third on a passed ball, and scored on Trafford's single. Upton sacrificed, Alward...
...third Burns hit safely to right. Linn threw low to first base and Burns took second, but was thrown out at third by Upton. Gould flied out to Howland. Hunt made a two-bagger and came in on Sullivan's single. Cummings assisted Lacey out. For the next two innings neither side scored...
...third, Taylor and Cutler made singles and Brooks brought them in with a three base hit to right centre. Dean assisted to make the third out. In the seventh inning Amherst brought her score dangerously near to Harvard's. Burns got a base on balls. Gould was hit by a pitched ball and Burns took second; Upton had a passed ball and Downer two wild pitches, on which both men scored. Harvard failed to score in the sixth and seventh inngs. In the eighth inning Harvard scored four times. Downer was out on a grounder to the infield. Burns threw...
...candidates for the Yale freshman crew have been cut down to ten men. Their names and weight are as follows: Gallaudett, 163 lbs; Rogers, (capt), 150 lbs; Wallis 167 lbs; Mills 173 lbs, Pond, 172; Graves, 169; Van Huck, 169 lbs; Pope, 160; Gould, 170; Cravens, 164. Just before the Easter vacation the men went to training table, and during the vacation with the exception of Saturday, they rowed twice every day under the supervision of James '90. The Yale News gives the following brief criticism of the different men: "Gallaudet rows a short stroke, is slow with body...
...bonded debf is liable to sale under the hammer; and as the price obtained under such circumstances is rarely enough to satisfy the bonds, this means that the stockholders of capital stock lose everything. The fortunes made not by "railroad wrecking" but by such men as Jay Gould show to what enormous abuses and injustice this procedure leads. Efforts are being made to find a remedy. Mr. Abbot's lecture on this subject will be interesting and ought to attract a large audience...