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Through an error the names of two men elected to the Dramatic Club were incorrect in yesterday's CRIMSON. The two men elected are Max Frederick Goldberg Unc. of Danville. Ill., to the Properties Department, and Charles Henry Warner Jr. '21 of Fall River, to the Orchestra...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Correction of Dramatic Club Elections | 6/3/1920 | See Source »

...score of 15 to 5. Thayer and Owen singled and Bancroft was passed, filling the bases. Lee doubled and brought in two men, making the score 7 to 5. After fanning Eddy, Case, the Eli pitcher, went wild, passed one man and hit another, again filling the bases. An error by the Yale shortstop let in two more runs. On the next play, Withington was forced at the plate. Thayer and Owen again hit safely but were left on bases, when Bancroft struck...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1923 OVERWHELMS ELI FRESHMEN--SIX RUNS IN LUCKY SEVENTH | 6/1/1920 | See Source »

...hitting and heavy scoring, the University second baseball team this afternoon snowed the Eli scrubs under, 18 to 8. As in the Freshman contest, the seventh was the big inning, when eight runs by the University seconds broke Yale's 5-4 lead. With the bases crowded on an error, a hit and a pass, and with none out, J. Martin '22 and C. J. Mason '22 singled, and E. H. Stillman '21 cleared the sacks with a home run. W. Roos Occ. then passed, E. S. Russell Occ. hit, and both scored on a long...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SECOND TEAM WINS AT NEW HAVEN | 6/1/1920 | See Source »

...days ago somebody prepared a message for telegraphing to Washington-to which President Lowell's signature was obtained-beginning: "In eighteen sixty-one, Queen Victoria and Abraham Lincoln joined to prevent war between England and America over the Trent affair." In the Herald, through a typographical error, the word "one" came out "our", so that it read: "In eighteen sixty our Queen Victoria and Abraham Lincoln," etc. But how any person of ordinary intelligence could suppose that the writer of any such message would put the possessive pronoun before the British Queen and omit it from Abraham Lincoln passes understanding...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 5/29/1920 | See Source »

...McSweeney is further not quite clear as to what the historical error was. He devotes some time to proving that there were hostile feelings between the United States and Great Britain before the Civil War. This is, of course, true, and obviously consistent with the telegram...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: McSWEENEY ON THE TELEGRAM | 5/28/1920 | See Source »

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