Word: walked
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...team by Dartmouth 1923 yesterday at Soldiers Field. Owen's exertion in traversing the bases evidently exhausted his pitching ability as Dartmouth, after having been retired in order for five frames, reached him in the next inning for four hits which, aided by infield errors, a wild pitch, a walk, and a hit batsman, gave the New Hampshire men six runs and the game...
...every professor and instructor in Dartmouth College could walk unseen with his class for the first 100 yards from the door after the end of the hour, daily for the period of one week, he could learn exactly what is wrong with his course. He could learn just wherein he is considered a success and a failure as a dispenser of information, just wherein he is considered just or unjust in recitation requirements and marking--in fact, every "what to do" and "don't do it" about his courses in the catalog of undergraduate criticism. Separating the chaff...
Team B threatened to walk away with the game when E. L. Bigelow '21 started a rally in the second inning by a neat single, and errors filled up the base. J. D. Murphy '22 then singled, sending Bigelow in; a sacrifice by Hardell and a single by R. B. Shaw '21 let in two more runs. With three men on bases Team B seemed due to win, but Felton solved the difficulty by retiring the next man, and in the second half of the inning, the first-string men recovered the lead with four runs...
...collection of Wordsworth are four copies of the "Lyrical Ballads," a first edition; the "Descriptive Sketches" bound by the famous binder Langorski and "Evening Walk"; a manuscript, "The Stone-pine of Monte Mario at Rome"; and a "Prelude," which-belonged to Lock-hart, the biographer of Scott. The prize book of the collection is, however, "An Account of the Books Lent out of the Library at Rydale Mount" in the original sheep, in the autograph of William Wordsworth and of Dorothy Wordsworth. In this account are entered the names of de Quincey, Dr. Arnold, and others, as having borrowed books...
...bring Bill and Mable together, because they are so far separated that there seems no power but the exigencies of the playwright hard put for a quick ending to cut the Gordian knot. But no one is disappointed, for Bill, brought to his senses by several refusals of work, walk the 256 miles back to Philopolis in true Prodigal son fashion, where Mable soon joins him. She has come to a rather ingenuous agreement with Wing on the basis that she will always love Bill better, and welcomes here old lover to the "little cottage with the green shutters...