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...last vacant slot in park's lineup is the designated bitter which was left empty by the graduation of All-GBL slugger Joe Mackey. The DH spot will be filled during the Crimson's 17-game road trip in Florida over spring vacation. Whoever wields the big bat during the citrus campaign will probably get the nod when Harvard gets back to Cambridge in April...

Author: By James W. Reinig, | Title: Baseball: Images of Summer | 3/24/1975 | See Source »

...Florida trip will feature five games against Niagara College and five games against the Montreal Expos' AA team, and will be the Crimson's final honing before the season. Harvard hosts Tufts and Boston College right off the bat on April 7 and 8 and then Columbia and Penn on April...

Author: By James W. Reinig, | Title: Baseball: Images of Summer | 3/24/1975 | See Source »

Independent trainer and chief bat boy Peter Borowitz was bitter about the 23-2 humiliation. "We have no business scheduling major league teams when we're just a rinky-dink squad," he said. Borowitz directed the Indy play from the dugout...

Author: By Archibald A. Acorn iii, | Title: Crimson Nine Tops Independent, 23-2 | 3/24/1975 | See Source »

...matter of hours at the Bureau of Petitions in order to ask for a change in one's life a different job, permission to have a child--and to be almost always refused One child is all a couple is allowed, and even that takes years of petitioning. Vasectomy bat mitzvahs every male. There is one unpaved area in the city: the Green, a glass walled lawn with trees The longest lines in the city form every day to look in at it. Living quarters are huge sleeping halls marked off with paint into individual spaces eight feet by twelve...

Author: By Tom Blanton, | Title: Reading Between the Lines | 3/15/1975 | See Source »

...rookie in 1923, Berg proved to be a great glove, a slow runner and a weak bat. The standard line on Moe was that he could speak many languages but couldn't hit in any of them. But as a catcher with the Chicago White Sox and later with the Boston Red Sox, he made a place for himself in the major leagues. "I spent years attempting to master a number of foreign languages," he said, "and what happens? I turn out to be a catcher and am reduced to sign language on the ballfield...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Catcher in the Reich | 2/3/1975 | See Source »

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