Word: seventeen
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...best work, making eight assists, of which five were in successive plays. Buckman was not very successful in holding Paine's erratic pitching, and, at the end of the sixth gave place to Morton, who played a good game. Stevenson showed considerable improvement in his position. He made seventeen put-outs and assisted in a double play, with only one error...
Paine pitched for five innings and then Highlands came into the box. In all the visitors made eleven hits with a total of seventeen. Harvard's record was eight with a total of twelve. F. Munro was very wild at times, but Harvard failed to hit him very hard. In the field Harvard did not have many chances. Wrenn let an easy grounder go by him and thus made his second error of the season. Winslow, who was back at third, was still somewhat hampered by his finger but the error he made was inexcusable. For Colgate, P. Munro...
...England Intercollegiate Athletic Association were held in Worcester last Saturday. Dartmouth won with a score of thirty-three points; Brown came next with twenty-two; and Amherst got third place with nineteen and one-half points; while Tech., which had expected to win easily, only got fourth place with seventeen points. S. Chase, of Dartmouth, made a total of fifteen points. He won the high hurdles in 15 3/5 sec. - equalling the world's record - and made two New England intercollegiate records - in the low hurdles and the running broad jump...
AMHERST, MASS., May 7. - Seventeen delegates, representing all the athletic associations of Williams, Dartmouth and Amherst, met this evening and discussed plans for a new athletic league and changes in the old constitutions of the baseball and football associations. E. K. Hall of Dartmouth, was chairman of the meeting. A committee, consisting of J. H. Irish of Williams, E. K. Hall of Dartmouth and F. M. Belden of Amherst was selected to draw up a constitution for new baseball, football, athletic and tennis associations. Each association is to draw up its own by-laws. The committee on constitution will report...
Provokingly little is known above the life of Aristophanes. Born in 444 B. C., he wrote his first play at the age of seventeen. He continued to write for forty years. Of his comedies eleven are extant besides fragments of thirty-three others. His plays are purely fanciful, as their names suggest. They contain lampoons upon the public men of the day which are sometimes bitter and always witty...