Word: virginia
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...hard-fought settlement of a 2 to 2 tie played on the University's southern tour will probably be made this afternoon when the University ball team meets the University of Virginia at Soldiers Field at 4 o'clock. The game at Charlottesville in the spring recess proved that the ability of the two nines is approximately equal. In this game, each team was credited with two runs and one error. Virginia made seven base-hits, and the University five. Twelve innings were played, and the game was called only to allow the University nine to catch a train. Garritt...
...expected, will pitch again today, but the chances are that Garritt will not. Since he was used in the Vermont game Saturday, and Mahan in Tuesday's contest with Georgetown, the rule of rotation of pitchers indicates that Coach Fred Mitchell will send Whitney to the box today. HARVARD. VIRGINIA. Coolidge, c.f. s.s., Berkeley Nash, 1b. r.f., Stearns Abbot, 2b. c.f., Smith Harte, c. l.f., J. White Beal, 3b. 1b., Thurman Knowles, l.f. 3b., Stickley Percy, r.f. 2b., Morton Reed, s.s. c., Gwathmey Whitney, p. p., Calloway
...Baseball vs. University of Virginia. Soldiers Field...
...members of the University baseball squad will leave on the 3 o'clock train for New York on the southern trip. The team will stay at the Hotel Vanderbilt tonight and tomorrow night, playing the first game with West Point tomorrow. The remaining games follow: Monday, University of Virginia at Charlottesville, Va.; Wednesday, Naval Academy at Annapolis; Thursday, Catholic University at Washington; Friday, Johns Hopkins at Baltimore; Saturday, Columbia at New York...
...whole falls below the dramatic level of the 'Eldest Son.'" There is a conventionally humorous consideration of that time-honored subject, "Cambridge Weather." There is a conventional undergraduate story, "The Flame," the heroine of which is like "the changing pastel tones" of the "warm amber of a Virginia sunset"--"soft, delicate, and passionless." And there is the usual amount of conventionally correct verse, with one piece, "Escaped," by Mr. W. A. Norris, that is more individual and distinguished than the rest. Even Mr. Cowley's vers libre is conventional according to the standards of "Spoon River...