Word: ever
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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When the class of 1866 of Williams College returns to Williamstown, two weeks hence, for its fiftieth reunion, Faculty, and friends will look with admiring awe upon the surviving members of the team which won the first intercollegiate baseball game ever played. Modern Williams players will be instigated to emulate the example of these pioneers of the national pastime, the victors over Harvard by a score of 12 to 9 in the Lexington of the college game...
...memorabilia include dramatic prints and portraits, manuscripts, playbills, magazines, plays and biographies which Mr. Shaw has been collecting ever since his graduation in 1869. The cataloguing and indexing of the mass of material has been so systematic that almost any phase of dramatic activity during the past three centuries may be referred to at an instant's notice. The virtually complete annals of the Boston and New York stages are represented, while the theatrical history of the rest of the United States and of England are exceptionally well shown. France and Germany are not neglected. Especially noteworthy are the dramatic...
...Tufts has defeated Springfield, Trinity and Holy Cross on the home field, the games in the opponents' territory will be severely contested. The first of the three has been going well all season, and has a fine collection of hitters. Holy Cross, too, has been playing recently better than ever, and with Donnellan, the former Medford High twirler, on the mound, will prove a hard proposition to down. Trinity should be disposed of with little difficulty, and Yale has been often defeated, due principally to loose fielding and injuries...
Group two, as usual, claims between one-fourth and one-fifth of the class. Physics shows the greatest gain, with ten men from 1919 as against one for 1918. Chemistry leads the group with a total of 78 men, six more than ever before...
...right to say that today's review in the Stadium signified more to the honor of Harvard than any of its greatest athletic victories ever did or ever can. It was not the work of eleven men and their substitutes but the feat of a thousand men and their officers. So large a representation could be taken as the measure of Harvard's whole undergraduate body. It made no difference that the crowd of spectators was thousands less than the throng which goes to a football game to gain public applause, they entered to help prepare themselves for an hour...