Word: kenly
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...third inning, the boys really got hot and pounded out three hits to score four times. Ken Crumrine led off with a base on balls; he was brought in by Jack Forte's long triple down the right field line, and Forte came riding home on a bingle by Swegan, who stole second and then scored on a wild pitch by B.P.E,'s Leonard. Wallace uncorked his homer to score the fourth run of the inning...
Harvard bats, which had previously rolled up such winning margins as 10-0, 11-0, 10-2, and 10-0, came through again in the last half of the inning, if not as lustily as usual. Ken Crumrine, after receiving a free ticket to first, worked his way around the bases by stealing second, taking third on Jack Forte's roller, and scoring easily as Art Conlon's grounder was fumbled...
Jack Wallace's single to left with the bases loaded spearheaded the fifth inning, mopping up after Conlon, John Coppinger, and Mel Allen had loaded the sacks. The trio of runs punched across in the last three frames, scoring Allen, Ken Crumrine, and Arnie Closky, were all routine...
...wild opening jamboree, the Stahlmen bunched three walks, two errors, a passed ball, and singles by Arnie Closky and Ken Crumrine to punch across the five tallies...
After 49 innings of pitching, Wallace finally gave way in the eighth and last inning to Lefty Knowles, regular B team hurler. With Harvard in the lead and the game almost over, Coach Stahl yanked both his pitcher and first baseman, Jim Fava, to give Knowles and Ken Crumrine Varsity experience. Wallace, in the seven innings that he pitched, was in form comparable to his 14-inning whitewashing of the Boston Coast Guard. Throttling the visitors with only four hits, he struck out eight, two with runners on first and third in the sixth. Knowles, pitching his first Varsity game...