Word: manned
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...field, but the visiting team was out classed at the bat. McKay pitched and excellent game for the Freshmen, allowing only three hits, striking out seven men, and giving but two bases on balls. After the first inning, when Yale made one run, McKay was invincible and only one man reached second until the ninth, when an error gave one more run to Yale...
...annual Memorial Day shoot for members of the Gun Club will this year be held on next Friday, May 29, instead of on Memorial Day. Each man will shoot at five strings of 20 birds each. The first string will be scratch and the others will be with handicaps based on the scores of the whole season and of the preceding string or strings in this tournament. An entrance fee of $1 will be charged...
...would be a bold man who would prophesy the fortunes of Mr. MacKaye's new play on the stage. It is so unlike anything that has been seen in the theatre these many years that parallels of any kind are hard to draw; and yet it has so much that is striking, even startling, in it that a theatrical sensation is by no means out of the question. "The Scarecrow" is a prose "tragedy of the indicrous," based upon a suggestion derived from Hawthorne's "Feathertop"; but the purely satirical purpose of the original story is replaced by an ethical...
...Since then the Freshmen have done well in practice, and should be in better shape than last week to put up a fast, hard game. McKay, who pitched the whole game at New Haven, will be in the box again today, while Yale will put in a new man, Hartwell. The Freshmen will have the advantage of playing on home grounds, and the game should be close. Positions in the batting orders have been slightly changed and the two teams will play as follows: HARVARD 1911. YALE 1911. Rogers, c.f. c., Badger A. Sweetser, 2b. 2b., Mcintyre McLaughlin...
...Every man must weigh carefully the evident advantages of such an organization, as a means of producing better understanding between Faculty and undergraduates, better unity among students, and as an aid to the Athletic Committee in making unnecessary the kind of curtailment to which we are all opposed. We must discuss and vote intelligently; but let no unfortunate demonstration come between us and the happy solution that appears to be in sight. The CRIMSON cannot urge too strongly the necessity of an unanimous expression in this matter and an attendance at the meeting that will leave no doubt...