Word: gone
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Once again Lampy has gone back to the bull rushes! His weary Ibis is a sad, sad sight, sunken deep in the mire, weary from lost battles on the ice, the track, and the diamond. Far off in Cambridge only the fame of the CRIMSON is heard. The score was 16 to 14. All Lampy's bombs, jeers, kicks, jokes (?), beer, cheers, and bean blowers were of no avail before the cool experts of the pride of American journalism. Nothing could overtax the nerve of the men who had braved the terrors of Memorial Hall's fishballs. Small fry from...
...CRIMSON will once more show its athletic superiority today by defeating the Lampoons in baseball on Soldiers Field at 4 o'clock. Again and again the funny boys have gone down to defeat before the representatives of the great daily, but every spring their fancy lightly turns to thoughts of baseball, and by fair means or foul they make up a team for the annual contest. It is rumored that several members of major league professional teams have been shanghaied and brought to Cambridge to take part in the game; but the CRIMSON team, trained to the minute on Memorial...
...University second baseball team will play the Holy Cross second nine in its fourth scheduled game at 3.30 o'clock this afternoon on Fitton Field, Worcester. In the absence of Powers, who has gone to Princeton with the shooting team, Keefe will captain the second team, and Rowley will play at second base...
...first score came in the second inning, when, after Dexter's three-base hit, Simons scored him with a single to left field. Harvard scored again in the fourth on errors. McCall went to third on Palmer's muff of Jube's throw, and after Dexter had gone out, scored on Palmer's second error, on which Simons reached first. He stole second but was left. Dana and Pritchett going out in order. Good chances to score were lost in the fifth and seventh innings by poor hitting. Currier opened the fifth with a two-bagger to centre, and after...
...already are places of pilgrimage for his sake. More than one youth in each of our swift college generations as he takes his daily walk, shall be touched by refining and inspiring thoughts as he recalls that he is treading the very path which the poet trod in years gone by; and many a stranger from distant regions of our own country or from distant lands will seek Cambridge for the sake of viewing the localities which Longfellow's Muse has consecrated...