Word: cleveland
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...five different parks, the men's championship went to the Pohlar's Cafe team of Cincinnati (owned by the proprietors of a German beer garden), whose pitcher, Clyde Kirkendall, had pitched 127 consecutive scoreless innings (a record) earlier in the season. Women's championship, won by Cleveland's Num Num Girls for the past two years, went to the J. J. Kriegs of Alameda, Calif, (owned by a little clothing merchant...
...Elbie Fletcher" day was observed. In New York the rampaging Red Sox took over the Yankees 5-3 in ten innings and then tied the nightcap. Other scores, NATIONAL--Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 3; Chicago 7, St. Louis 2; Brooklyn 5, Philadelphia 1; Philadelphia 5, Brooklyn 1. AMERICAN: Detroit 7, Cleveland 5; St. Louis 7, Chicago 2; Philadelphia 6, Washington 5; Washington 5, Philadelphia...
...paper, "The Guidon," which appeared soon after the opening of camp was directed by I. tucker Burr, III '39 as Editor-in-Chief. As assistants from Harvard he had Edwin R. Clarke '39; Arthur R. Borden, '39; Frank E. Southard '39 Law; and Walter Kaitz, '39. AS department editors, Cleveland Amory '39; Rud Hoye '39 and Mathew Taback '39; while sports were handled by Francis J. Donovan Jr., '39. With the excellent assistance of the Yale members of the board a fine paper was turned out. Every phase of camp life was aptly covered; in fact Walter Winchell probably could...
...shot. He was followed by four who qualified as Sharpshooters, Frank E. Southard '39 Law, score 84.7 % R. G. Jones '39 score 84.4%; Donald L. Daughters '39 score 83.7% and P. R. Wentworth '39, score 81.3%. Those who qualified as Marksmen, with scores ranging from 60% to 78% were Cleveland Amory '39; Fred S. Armstrong Jr. '39; I. Tucker Burr III '39; William L. Calfee '39; Francis J. Donovan '39; Frank r. Harnden '39; Nathaniel Heard '40; Robert J. Hoye '39; Howard Johnson '39; Bernard Kalman '39; Oscar Swartz '39; Frederick D. Wright...
...Harvard men who filled the hard job of 1st Sergeant, he who roused the men at 6:00 A.M., lined them up for roll calls, turned them out for parades, were as follows: Raymond G. Jones '39; Cleveland Amory '39; I. Tucker Burr '39; Frank S. White '39 and Frank L. Southard...