Word: manned
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...game in the first inning, while he was pitching. Van Vleck was substituted in the second inning and held Princeton down well. Yale scored in the second inning with Williams' clean hit over second and in the fifth through McLean's error. In the ninth, Yale worked a man around to third, but Dillon made a clever stop of T. Jones' hard drive and prevented a score. Three men on Princeton's team, Cooney, Sides and McLean, were responsible for Princeton's twenty-seven put-outs...
...emphasized, that about a fourth of the men in each class that is graduated from Harvard College enter upon a business career. For these men, as well as for the other members of the class, it seems to us that it would be a good plan to invite some man prominent in industry to speak to the Seniors on the demands of the business world on college men today--to tell them what they can do by their own power, as a result of their training here, and by the force of their example, to raise the tone...
...cheering section merely because of the discomfort of walking in a crowd, should realize that they have more responsibility than at a professional game. Numbers count in cheering as well as enthusiasm, and a half-filled cheering section is nearly as useless as none at all. Let every man who has no good reason for doing otherwise, plan to march to the field and procure a seat in the cheering section at the first sale...
...statement that there were not enough seats in the cheering section at the last Yale game, we understand that this year several sections along the third base line will be sold only as cheering sections for the first few days of the sale. As all seats are reserved, no man who marches in the parade will be forced to stand, no matter how large the crowd may be. This arrangement should remove one of the most serious obstacles in the way of united cheering, and should assure a hearty support for the team. The writer of the communication further objects...
There is little need to urge the fitness of the Union for such a memorial. It is firmly established as an important factor in undergraduate life. There is less need to urge a hearty response to any call for subscriptions which may be made. Every man in the University should be glad to do his small part toward bringing future classes into closer touch with the memory of a man who gave to Harvard the best years of a singularly valuable life, and who won the love as well as the respect of countless undergraduates...