Word: fifthly
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Music Lover" Henry Van Dyke describes with his usual felicity of style the tranquilizing and uplifting effect made upon a toil-worn man of the world by a performance of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony in C minor. Subjective interpretations of musical masterpieces are fraught with danger, as the same music may mean one thing to one hearer and something else to another. But Mr. Van Dyke has shown discretion in selecting for his possibly too rhapsodic treatment a work of Beethoven which is intensely subjective and even, as far as absolute music can be, definitely autobiographic. It is well known...
...both teams scored once, the University team gained the lead in the third, but Holy Cross tied the score in the fourth, on Carney's home-run. Harvard again took the lead with a run in its half of the fourth, and Holy Cross brought in another in the fifth. Holy Cross made their last run in the next inning...
...fifth, Leonard singled and stole second. McCall was out for bunting on the third strike. Leonard tried to make third on Mansfield's throw to second, and was safe, as O'Rourke dropped Cashen's throw. Harvey flied out but Aronson singled to centre, scoring Leonard. Holy Cross made a run in the sixth, on doubles by Mansfield and Carney, with two out. After that the opponents were not dangerous...
...fifth with two out Leonard singled and stole second, while McCall waited for a base on balls. The two then worked a clever double steal. Harvey hit towards the pitcher, who blocked the ball so that the second baseman just got the runner at first and put the side out. Aronson's home run in the next inning came with none out. After two were gone Simons singled and stole second, but was left when Harding flied to Ebeling. With one out in the ninth Aronson received a pass and went to third on Lanigan's grounder to short. Currier...
...defeated by Princeton in the second game of the series at Princeton Saturday by the close score of 3 to 2. Clark pitched an excellent game for Princeton and kept the hits well scattered. The only two hits off Van Vleck, the Yale pitcher, were made in the fifth inning, when Princeton did all their scoring. Yale's two runs were made in the sixth. The batting and fielding of both teams was weak and erratic, and there were numerous errors throughout the game...