Word: wildness
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...first to catch him off the base. The throw was poor, and the ball rolled to right field. Stevenson took second, and kept on to third as Keator let the ball get away from him. Wrenn was given a base on balls and as the last one was a wild pitch, Stevenson crossed the plate. Wrenn also scored on Winslow's three-bagger which Speer just managed to touch but could not hold. Scannell was so anxious to make a hit that he struck at anything, and consequently struck out, leaving Winslow on third...
Earned Runs - Yale 6. Two base hits - S. Quinby, Redington, Stephenson. Three base hits - Scannell, Winslow. Home runs - Rustin, Speer. Sacrifice hits - Keator, Redington, Stolen bases - Rustin, Speer. First base on balls - Rand, Stevenson, Wrenn, Hayes. Wild pitch - Trudeau. Struck out - McVey 2, Winslow 2, Scannell 2, Hayes 2, Paine, Trudeau. Umpire - O'Rourke. Time...
...ever been in the Wild West can not but enjoy every minute of the time spent in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show and Congress of Rough Riders of the World. The horse racing of Cowboys, Mexicans, Arabs, Gauchos, Indians, etc., the sharpshooting of Miss Oakley and Johnny Baker, the exhibition of lassoing by the Mexicans, are but few of numerous exciting and absorbing features. The crowning feature, however, is the sharpshooting, at full speed, of Col. W. F. Cody (Buffalo Bill...
...Durfee of Geneseo, N. Y., Harry E. Foster of Keene, N. H., and Frederick W. Memmott of Newark, N. J.; dissertations, Charles M. Burdick of Lowville, N. Y., John P. Congdon of Wyoming, N. Y., Benjamin C. Heald of Portland, Ore., Rufus G. Mather of Brooklyn, John D. Wild of Manchester, Vt., George W. Hunter of Norwalk, Conn., H. A. Morse of Mansfield, Harold P. Moseley of Westfield, Frank S. Parmenter of Troy, and John A. Sampson of Troy...
...which those of us familiar with Harvard life know to be as untrue as it is demoralizing, has been heard in this new field. Too many men have gone to the Tree with friends, or for some other reason have failed to march in with their class and the "Wild ring about the Liberty Tree," which Longfellow mentioned in his Journal on Class Day, 1846, is in danger of being not much larger in the number of participants than it was 50 years ago. This tendency has greatly disappointed the alumni; and those of us who have been connected with...