Word: leading
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...responsibility was given to Andrews and Cordingley, who seemed unable to resist the Georgetown onslaught. The last game with Columbia was probably the best of the trip although the Blue eked out a 7 to 6 win in the final inning by overcoming a two run Harvard lead...
...with very little formidable opposition until its last game, with the Choate School. Pomfret was disposed of by 4 to 1 while Loomis and Hotchkiss took the short end of 12 to 1 and 18 to 3 scores respectively. In the Choate game, the school team took an early lead of four runs and held it until the seventh inning when the Freshmen were able to tie the score. The Freshmen went to bat first in the ninth and made what proved to be the winning run due to an error by the Choate left fielder...
...crime news to a separate department, similar to "Sport" and "Business," on an inside page. Last week, The Register announced that its experiment would be continued until opportunity might be had for "conclusive findings" on the merit of the plan. Also last week, whether by coincidence or following the lead of the Des Moines Register, other U. S. newspapers adopted trial crime segregation policies...
Died. McKinley, Arabian horse on which Col. William F. Cody ("Buffalo Bill") galloped into the ring at his famed Wild West Shows; in Denver, Col. Since 1917, when his master died, he has kept to his stall. Last November, he emerged to lead the Armistice Day parade-his last public appearance...
...chief parts are in the hands of very competent and way-wise actors: F. M. Eaton '27, as the leading man, and therefore the Plot, is personable and easy: J. C. MacDonald '26, is an agreeable lepidopterist (a lepidopterist just makes the glasses he doesn't test your eyes: not allowed to by law, or some-thing); J. H. Wright '25, is apparently a butler, but when he lays hold of an ukulele and sings with Mr. Wilson, or when he does a neat step-dance with Mr. Wilson, J. H. Wright '27 is as admirable as Crichton...