Word: fielders
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Heaviest hitter for the Crimson nine was right fielder Sherm Clark, with a double and a single. Jack Wallace helped his own cause along with a long triple. Second-baseman Belanger of the Coast Guard, who played pro ball for several years, was the heavy hitter of the day, with a triple and a home run in three turns to the plate. Wallace struck out four men, while Greeley fanned one. Foti, the Coast Guard pitcher, racked up three strikeouts...
...probable starting lineup for the Crimson will see Sherman Clark, right-fielder and a member of last year's Varsity, leading off, followed by Bob Slattery at first base. Bob Chapple at second is next, with George Boston at center field in the clean-up spot...
Quonset opened the scoring in the second with two men out, when left fielder Siegfried singled to right field. Priebe then grounded to Jack Falsey, Crimson shortstop, who bobbled the ball and threw to first basemen "Slats" Slattery. Slattery dropped the ball, and the man was safe. Bill Lutz, presuming Priebe out, left third base and Siegfried came roaring around to score while Slattery and second baseman Bob Chapple ran down Priebe...
Harvard came back to go ahead in the fifth when George Boston, center fielder at the clean-up position, singled to left, and Lutz followed with a single to right. Art Conlon then advanced them and Jack Falsey sent them both home with a bingle to deep right field...
Besides the regular record sustainers, Radio Radcliffe broadcasts interviews, drama, and special features. Conductor Arthur Fielder, pianist Boris Godolvsky, Professor Robert Hillyer, Associate Professor Theodore Spencer, and poet Delmore Schwartz are among the celebrities who have been interviewed. Harvard-Radcliffe Radio Workshop plays, presented occasionally at Harvard, are heard via a two-way private telephone wire between the field house studios and the Crimson Network. The telephone wire is used for exchange broadcasts going in the other direction...