Word: brought
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Yale scored twice in the opening inning. With one out Fels was given a base on balls. A three-base hit by Jefferson scored Fels and a hit by Logan brought Jefferson home...
...started the fourth badly by hitting Jefferson. Though Logan flied out, hits by Sweeney and Mallory filled the bases. Then a hit by Corey allowed Jefferson to score and left the bases still filled. A base on balls was given to Van Vleck, forcing Sweeney, and Badger's bunt brought in Mallory on a close decision with the third run of the inning. Fels flied out and Badger was thrown out at second on Murphy's grounder to Magner. In the fifth, after two men had struck out, Sweeney secured a base on balls and after stealing second scored when...
...increase its usefulness in the University. Early in October pamphlets were issued containing 21 pages of information in regard to social service in Boston and Cambridge, and sent to all men who expressed on their registration cards a willingness to undertake philanthropic work. By this means many men were brought into touch with social service who otherwise would have known nothing of it. The committee has met regularly during the year at informal sessions in the Directors' Room at Memorial Hall. Its activities have been carried on under the direction of A. G. Cable '09, chairman. J. T. Nightengale...
...four defeats experienced so far this season are easily accounted for. One was brought on by two bad pitchers' innings, taken advantage of by the opposing team in a terrific batting rally. The Brown game was the result of being unable to hit a pitcher of professional effectiveness, while our pitchers faced a batter whose hits were responsible for four out of the five runs in the two games. The second Cornell game was lost three times, twice by errors which come to the best players once in so often...
...total amount realized from subscriptions during the past year was $7,900--only one-sixteenth of the total athletic income--while the sale of H. A. A. tickets alone brought in more than $10,000. The deficiency resulting from the complete abolition of collections could be made up in more ways than one. The most feasible would probably be raising the price of H. A. A. tickets. As the demand for them is pretty constant, and advance of from $3 to $5 would probably not result in a greatly decreased sale. Even this problematical decrease could be met by having...