Word: lefts
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...former University football and lacrosse star, has been appointed head coach of the Harvard lacrosse forces for next season, according to an announcement made at the Athletic Association last night. H. W. Jeffers 2G.B., who guided the Crimson stickmen through the major part of the past season, has left the University...
Professor Charles Townsend Copeland '82 left the University yesterday afternoon. He motored to Walpole Inn, Walpole, New Hampshire, with his nephew and niece, Charles Dunbar and Mrs. R. D. Gay. On July 7, he plans to sail from New York on the "Adriatic". It is his intention to spend two weeks in London and then motor through England and portions of Scotland. He will return to his rooms in Hollis 15 the fifteenth of September. Professor Copeland resigned from active teaching service last January after more than 30 years as a lecturer and teacher in the English Department...
...base hits-Donaghy 2. Three base hits-Cutts, Donaghy, Prior, Bloxsom, Home runs-Burns. Stolen bases-Burns 2, Chase, Lord. Sacrifice hits Barbee, Lord, Prior Base on balls-off Ethridge 4, off Hallett, 3, Cassldy 1, by Hallett 3, Left on bases-Harvard 11, William and Mary 3. Double plays-Bloxsom to Scammon. Hits-or Cassidy, 3 in 2 innings (note out in taird); off Etheridge 5 in 3 inngs (none out in sixth); off Hallett 5 in 3 innings Passed balls-O'Farrell 2. Wild pitch-Cassedly. Time-2.07 Umpires-Stafford and Kellether...
...problem is not even as simple as club versus non-club. There is the hierarchy of established clubs to be considered. Leaving the feeding problem aside, it is a question whether smaller, not larger, sections might not offer a solution. If 50 percent instead of 25 percent were left out of clubs the clubs would not be such an integral part of Princeton life. The unclubbable element effectually stops a solution in the other direction...
...refusal of the Harvard Corporation on May 28 to approve plans proposed to erect portable steel stands in the open end of the Stadium had left the substitution of the old wooden seats as the only practical method remaining to accommodate the crowds of the 1928 football season. The permission once more to erect these sheds, condemned by civic authorities because of fire danger, was granted with the understanding that no such concession would be made after the fall...