Word: freshmen
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Yesterday afternoon the Yale freshmen won the first game of the series with the Harvard freshmen by extremely hard batting, aided by the very wild pitching of the Harvard pitcher. The beginning of the game was delayed by the failure of the umpire, Mr. Pearce, to put in an appearance, and in his absence, Mr. Wiestling, '87, filled the position most acceptably to both nines. The game was not a creditable exhibition of ball playing, by either nine, but the Harvard freshmen succeeded in bunching the greatest number of errors, and the Yale freshmen the greater number of hits...
...following will be the Freshman nine in to-day's game with the Yale freshmen: Sabine, p.; Young, c.; Vila, 1b.; Mumford, 2b.; Linn, 3b.; McLeod, s.s.; Codman, l.f.; Slade, c.f.; Campbell...
...Physics and Chemistry two courses, which extend further the field open to freshmen, have been added. They are both lettered...
...occurs to day. The freshman game with Yale is one which the whole college turns out to see, and the responsibility of the way in which the class will be considered, athletically speaking, falls in great measure on the shoulders of the members of the nine. Last fall the freshmen showed their mettle in winning a splendid victory over Yale on the foot-ball field and there is no reason why they should not do the same to day. For the past three years no Harvard freshman team has been beaten on its own grounds by their opponents from...
...they are not intended as a school for creating a love of low ribaldry or other coarse wit. Some time ago a number of juniors had the pleasure of seeing their nine win a game of ball through their skill at "rattling." Yesterday the sophomores copied those tactics. The freshmen tried to chime in, and now the spirit of interference seems to be in full sway...