Word: princetonian
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Against the powerful batters of the Princetonian Saturday the ambidextrous moundsman of the CRIMSON fought his way to a startling five to five victory. Ably backed by his fighting team he pitched only as well as his Princetonian opponent who also had the better end of a five run tie. Several times during the game the reversible battery reversed itself with a creditable show of technique and flaming Crimson...
...quickly with several men striking out on each side. The second inning, marked only by occasional shifts in the line-up, passed with equal rapidity as the teams went around the batting order. In this inning either two or three runs were scored for the CRIMSON and forced the Princetonian hurlet behind the bench. The third and fourth frames were filled with the crack of bats as the Crimson willows, second only to the war clubs of the battling Princetonians, struggled hard to stop the batting order from going around. By the fifth inning the umpires had retired into conference...
...Wednesday night a pleading, cheering, imploring mob of Harvard students filled the Union, chanting "Beat the Princetonian baseball team." To Coach Field's exhortation, in that moment when he silenced the pandemonium with an uplifted hand and said quietly, "Fellows, England expects every man to do his duty," it were superfluity to add a jot. Six thousand throats have bled themselves white cheering for the team so far this season. Twelve thousand feet have stamped in unison whenever an opposing pitcher showed the slightest tendency to waver. Harvard wants no flagging of this spirit...
Last year the Crimson and the Princetonian held a baseball game in Cambridge which was in the nature of a protest against the complete severance of relations between the undergraduates of the two universities. Old school mates took advantage of this initial venture in journalistic athleticism to renew ties of long standing, while the rest of the two editorial squads profited greatly from contact with their fellow workers from another college. The invitation from Princeton to continue this rivalry by a return game was accepted with alacrity by the Crimson diamond enthusiasts this spring...
...departure for Nassau, the CRIMSON nine's hopes for a victory over the Princetonian sluggers tomorrow received a severe blow when it became known at a late hour last night that H. C. Bartlett '28, who composed the better half of the $250,000 ambidextrous reversible battery, had sprained his right...