Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, May 27, 1897, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE WISCONSIN RACE,
Westerners at Saltonstall—Statistics
and Training.
ee
The race between the University eight
and the Wisconsin crew will be held
on Lake Saltonstall, Saturday, May 29.
The course is two miles and the race
will be started as soon after 4:30 p. m.
as possible. It has been decided not to
admit the Freshman crew. The officials
had not been selected at the time of the
Weekly going to press. The Univer-
sity boat will not modify its stroke for
the shorter course.
The best means of reaching the Lake
will be by the trolley cars, which leave
the Green at short intervals during the
afternoon.
The University of Wisconsin crew
arrived in New Haven Wednesday,
May 19. They are quartered near
Lake Saltonstall, being thirteen in
number, including the crew, substi-
tutes, coach and manager. The men
have practiced on the lake and taken
short runs about the surrounding
country.
The training up to April 6 was all
done in the new rowing tank at their
University, as the ice prevented them
from rowing on the water before that
time. They have, therefore, not had
as much experience in watermanship
as the Yale crew. Their new shell,
which was built for the crew by Davy
of Cambridge, did not arrive until
Friday, when five days had elapsed
since they had rowed in a Shell.
Commodore Waite of the Wisconsin
Navy, denied the reports that his
crew would row Columbia in the Har-
lem Regatta, and later the Oniversity
of Pennsylvania. He said that it had
been definitely decided to return im-
mediately after the race with the Yale
crew, on May 29. In regard to allow-
ing the Hreshmen crew to enter the
race and malze it a triangular one, he
said that the men were all willing to
row them, but the Faculty had ob-
jected, on the ground that they had
had one Freshmen race last year, and
as they had been victorious it seemed
scarcely necessary to race them this
year. They preferred to row a crew
which represented the University,
rather than any one class.
In speaking of their stroke, Coach
O’Dea, of the Yarra-Yarra Boat Club
of Australia, said: ‘It is partly. my
own, somewhat adapted from. the
stroke that is rowed by the oarsmen
in Australia. It differs from the Yale
stroke in that the swing is not so
long, and the recovery is a bit stead-
ier, but in other respects it is mainly
the same. Of last year’s crew only
three are now rowing, and four Fresh-
men will possibly row in the race. So
it may be seen that the men are some-
what new.”
The statistics of the two crews are
as follows:
WISCONSIN,
Position. Name. Wt.
Stroke—M. E. Sey-
mour, ’98, of Be-
1ONTs. WIS. oi ceetesas es
No. 7—F. H. Crosby,
1990, of Chicago, L!1.
No. 6--L. F. Austin,
98 (capt.), of Dan-
WEG, WAR. és ce edies
No. 5—A. R. Ander-
son, 1900, of La
Crosse; Wis. °. 6355.
No. 4—W. C. Suther-
land, 1900, of Mad-~-
OO ARs wk sche car
No. 3—H. R. Cham-.
berlain, ’99, of Dar-
lington, Wis. ......
No. 2—L. Olson, ’3,
of Manitowoc, Wis.
No. 1—A. F. Aleyen-
der, ’98, of Menro-
PAINS WV 1S. ys Soca e.
Sub.—A. H. Priizlaff,
99, of Milwaukee,
Sh ER ee as
‘ * . Lake,
of Madison, Wis....
Cox.—H. R. Cren-
weal, 'S8;~ of Mis
waukee, Wis. ......
Height. Age,
166°°6 £0.07 in, 22
154 5ft.10in. 19
164 6 ft. 1% in. 23
172.5 Doel ins ep
160 DE. Win,
162
160
5 ft.
5 ft.
8 in. a1
9 in. 20
154 °b. it. 9: in. 22
172
184
6 ft. 21
6ft. lin. 20
114 5 ft. Bin. 22
YALE.
Position. Name. Wt.
Stroke — George
Langford, ’978S., of
St. Paul, Minn.....
No. 7 — William Ed-
ward Scherick Gris-
wold, ’99, of Erie,
WO ESSA bs ceca Cee ee ck ve 172
No. 6—-Frederick
Winthrop Allen,
1900, of Walpole, :
yg ON Rpt SES Bee me aaa” 184 5 ft. 11%, in. 19
No. 5.—Philip Horton
Belle, (St; of
Windsor Locks, Ct.
No. 4.—Paul Denckla
Mills, ’97S., of West
OLIN ING Nicest cous
Height. Age.
1% 6ft. 2in. 20
eS PE Bb 20
181 6 ft.
YALE ALUMAIL WEEKLY
No. 38.—Henry God-
win Campbell, Jr.,
Et of Paterson, N.
171-6 ft... 46 in. a
ney, °98, of New
Orme: Gi ae os ee,
Bow.—David Francis
Rogers, ’98, of New
Canaan, Conn......
Cox.—Louis Free-
man Greene, ’99, of
ATDiGa. “INS “W aie is. ve
172 5 ft. 10% in. 22
166 6 ft. 20%
The Freshman Crew.
The Freshman crew will go to New
London at the close of the recitations
in the Academic Department, June 9,
and will train on the Thames until two
or three days before the race at Pough-
keepsie, on June 23, with the Harvard
and Cornell Freshmen. |
Eleven men will go to New London.
The preliminary training of the men
was done in the tank during’ the
months of January and February, and
short runs were taken daily. After
March, they moved to the _ harbor,
where they rowed short stretches and
did pair-oar work. The crew now rows
from four to eight miles every day,
with short brushes with the University
and ciass crews, in whicn they have
made a very creditable showing. The
second Freshman crew has been main-
tained throughout the season and row-
ed in tne Spring Kega.ta. A cedar
shell, which is a new thing for a Yale
Freshman crew, has been ordered from
Davy of Cambridge, and wiil be sent
directly to New London. The contract
for the oars has been given to Donohue
of Newburgh. These oars are similar
to the English ‘Norris’ oars, which
have become so famous, .
The coaching of the crew has been
at different times in the hands of Mr.
Cook, J. O. Rodgers ’98, and H. B. W1l-
cox ‘98, all of whom express satisfac-
tion at the work of the crew up lO the
present time. Mr. Cook said tnat the
crew was much better than that of last
year, and he expected that they would
make an excellent showing in any race
they might enter; that the Men were
apt now to seem a bit vver-traitned,
but that it was a crew with a great
deal of power, and one in whicn he
could place his confidence.
The men who are now rowing on the
first crew, with their weights, are.as_
follows: Stroke, W. B. Williams, 160;
7, J. H. Niedecken, 1738; 6, J. C. Green-
way, 172; or R. M. McGee, 187; 5, da W.
Cross, 179; 4, R.. J. Flint, 170; 3);3% a
Brock, Captain, 184; 2, T. Simons, 172;
bow, R. M. Patterson, 159.
—_—_—__++—_—_—_
The Harlem Crew.
The Harlem crew, which will repre-
sent Yale in the Harlem Regatta on
the Hudson May 31, has been entered
in two events, the Junior as well as
the Senior eight-oared race, and will
row in the morning and afternoon.
The men have been coached daily by
J. H. Simpson, ’97, and up to the pres-
ent time have been using the ’94 Uni-
versity shell. In the races they will use
the last year’s Henley shell. The men
who will compose the eight, together
with their weights, are as follows:
Bow, J. C. McLauchlan, 162; 2, R.
Hitchcock, 170; 38, A. B. Marvin, 162;
4, W. P. Slocovich, 174; 5, Stuart Pat-
terson, 172;:.6,.H.. Parkhurst, 1i6yo-4,
S. IT. Marsh, 172;° stroke, A. T. Hewitt.
162; coxswain, T. L. Clarke, 115.
——_+>—___—-
Freshmen Lose to Harvard.
The Yale Freshman base ball team
played their first game with the Har-
vard Freshmen at the Field on Satur-
day, May 22, and were defeated by a
score of 7 to 2. Owing to the large at-
tendance at the Spring Regatta, only
300 people witnesses the game, but the
cheering was enthusiastic on both sides,
the Yale contingent being led by sev-
eral ’98 men.
Harvard won a deserved victory. The
Yale team was composed of the follow-
ing: Eddy, 1. f.; Norton, 2b.; Ferguson,
r. f.; Bronson, s. s.; Russell, 1b.; Sulli-
van, c.; Crawford, 3b.; Whittlesey, D.;
Lyon, c. f. The score by innings and
summary follow:
VOI isis iess 1000010 0 O02
Harvard 4 vat i 06-3 00300183 0 07
Summary: Earned runs, Harvard 3;
two-base hit, McCormick; home run,
Loughlin; stolen bases, Yale 5, Harvard
1; bases on balls, off McCormick 7, off
Whittlesey 5; struck out, by McCormick
7, by Whittlesey 2; passed balls, by Sulli-
van 1: wild pitch, McCormick; time of
game, 21-4 hours: umpire, M. J. Murray.
+04
The Harvard Cricket Team won the in-
tercollegiate championship, Friday, May
21, by defeating Haverford at Longwood.
_base hits,
THE BASE BALL WEEK.
The University’s Steady Play Brings
Two Victories
The University nine played a very
one-sided and uninteresting game
against the Amherst nine Wednesday,
May 19, at the Yale Field. In the first
inning the home team scored four runs
and added five more in the second. The
Amherst pitchers were batted freely
andthe fielding of the visitors was very
weak and uncertain. The feature of
the game was a double play by Camp
and Fincke, the former catching a
liner with his right hand and doublirg .
up a runner on third. The final score
was 15 to 2. The tabulated score:
Amherst.
: ab fr 1b sh po 4-6
Premory. -cf....655 3 4.2Di id OS 25 0s a
Tyler, BN a cnes backs cs Beds OD 8D
DINAN, C555 <5: 4. De) a Se
Thompson, ss. ...... 4 (0 D300: -6 33
maker, Tf... ..5. 5.5% oe ep
Muerte. OH. 650 te $9 eee ee
Boyden, p. ..... iste. 0 * OF SOs he
(EDS « megraearenet ste cs S.°O:-)2 he as
SSR | Sea Re tate $550: 34 ee eee
Messenger, 2b. ...... eet yess | Menge | ease | ape Pies RS
OLS ER Ge a S22 BS Bt TE a
zoe :
b> 2 1b “sh pea e
PeeRCOr.: Cl, 0. 6 Was Oe... 8 0 0
warnham,. lf. °s 0... Rae ieee Poca tama Sete: Var
PPeTtON. 1D. secs ccess Se en peace | mam Bees: Mee b
ppamcne,. 8b. coc: Oe oO. 8 eS
SeRERD; OSs ioc ss ac eee GB 2ee > D322 see
MACOS, TT, oi 4sods. BBO 0 O80
Pema PDs. ook ou y Sac | Mica lerhe: | Pare ate key
Hecker, ea sc ed ye et 2 3 oe
Beet. D4) 6s ss 5 Ao ee De BSD
OOOO Win, C5435 05..5 oo a Oe ee a
Derorest, -c. 35S, Be Oe Oe aD
BMUHAS sesh eee: O22 16 30: F8
‘Runs by Innings.
Aammnerst 23.5055. USGS PB WR | Pe: Das tae 1 ae Mae | ete
OE RS RS A SE a Oo - 2 9 Ooo 1 1 eh
Summary: BParned run—Yale 1 Two-
base hits—Camp, Letton.
Yale 6, Amherst 4. Double play—Camp
and Fincke. Base on balls—Oft Hecker
2, off Boyden 2, off Blake 1. Hit by pitched
ball—Letton, Tyler. Struck out—Good-
win, DeForest, Thompson, Tinker, Blake
3, Foster, Messenger 2. Passed ball—Sul-
livan 1. Wild pitch—Hamlin 1, Time of
game—Two hours. Umpire—O Brien.
Bases stolen—
YALE 1900, 14; WILLISTON, 5.
The Freshmen base ball team de-
feated Williston Academy on Wednes-
day, May 19th, at Easthampton, Mass.,
by’ a score of 14 to 5. The game after
the third inning was well played and:
was noteworthy for the heavy batting
of the Freshmen. The pitching of the
1900 team has not improved materially
since the beginning of the season. Ly-
on played the best game for the Fresh-
men, putting out six men in his posi-
tion at center field. The team is play-
ing well together, and should, before
the end of the year, make a good show-
ing. Following is the score by innings
and summary:
wase. 1900: spac x Rete: gees ie | We re: Lees ee Tees S|
Williston - : ite 01202000 0—5
Earned runs, Yale 38, Williston 0; two-
Dunn, Lyon, Pond, Roberts;
home run, Dunn; bases stolen, Yale 11,
Williston 2; base on called balls, off Dunn
1, off Ely 3; base on hit by pitched ball,
Riddell; struck out, by Dunn 1, by Ely 9;
passed balls, Whiton 5; wild pitch, Ely
umpire, Parshall; time of game, two
ours. ‘
YALE, 5; ORANGE A. C., 4.
The University nine defeated the
Orange Athletic Club team in a very
closely contested game at the Orange
RS
2
WHITE neglige and tennis
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They not only look well; they
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We have a nice stock of them
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In colored shirts you can have
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In ties the English “Rum-
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and “Bagdad” Ascots and Rug-
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We can supply you at any
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CHASE & CO.,
New Haven House Block.
Oval, Saturday, May 22. The work of
both pitchers was very steady and ef-
fective, and their support was stroné-
Yale’s victory came as a result of time-
ly hits, for her total was not as lare©
as her opponents’. Her fielding game
was also very fast and clean. CampDbD,
Fincke and Letton did the best work in
this respect, while Hazen led at the
bat.
The score:
iS
°
NS] saommrrebor:
Keator.Cf:s60,655..
FIORE AL see hays
SiClTter sae bias cs;
Warlace, 8f 35. oss:
FROCG, BOs ko nso + se
PIGCROP Se Dei skis
Goodwin, °C: <. cis.
Totals
a
nl cocooHoomnmn
al oocHhHRHwot
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=
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Orange, A. C.
a.b.
TALS Cts a eas 9 4
INAICHOISS TTS eis Ss.
Ee SARS EMER STEER ga oes
Mmtih; 80. sses cues os
Grissenger, SS. .....
Horner, 1b.
'S
(e)
ear
~ | COOCCWHH Hb:
CUMIN? 205 ORs:
Westervelt, p. veaes
TS OCAIS-C SG 5k. Secs 33
Orange: Ay Crees OQ: -28- 2 0 0
Yale 2:82-9:21 2:0. -Q
Earned runs—Orange 2, Yale 1. Two-
base hit—Horner. Stolen bases—Grissen-
ger, Horner 2, Murphy, Ietton. Sacrifice
hits—Grey, Smith, Grissenger, Letton,
Camp. Bases on balls—Murphy 2, West-
ervelt, Keator. Double plays—Cuming
and Smith, Wallace and Letton. Struck
out—Nichols 2, Grissenger 2, Horner, Mur-
phy, Cuming, Wallace, Reed, Hecker 3,
Fincke, Camp. Hit by pitcher—Reed.
Passed ball—Goodwin. Wild pitch—W est-
ervelt. Time—2 hours. Umpire—Hopkins.
OPN EAD RP
ml ooonHHoooy,
ool CHONHENONS
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—_——_—_»$6@—___
The Punting Contest.
Contests in punting were held at the
Yale Field on Monday, "May 24. The
University Foot Ball Management had
offered cups to the three men whose
records were the best. After a close
contest the following three men were
awarded the prizes: First, G. S. Chaun-
cey, ’98S.; second, M. L. McBride, 1900:
third, T. BE. Franklin, 1900. W. T. Bull,
’*88S., acted as judge.
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