Word: bit
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Path of Sacrifice" by J. L. F. is an allegorical poem which impresses one as a bit too obscure in meaning and too eccentric in its metrical form. "The Day of Prophecy," by H. W. Holmes '03, the other contribution in verse, is spirited and has a brave ring. A happy editorial on the strength-test insignia question and a group of book reviews complete the number...
Earned runs--Harvard 5 Home runs--Reid 2, Frantz. Two-base hits--Frantz, Flavell. Sacrifice bit--G. c. Clark. Stolen bases -- Coolidge, Collier. Bases on balls -- by Stillman: Collier, White, Flavell; by Clarkson: Brown, Leary; by Leary; Murphy, Coolidge; by Layton: Murphy, G. C. Clark, Frantz, Clarkson. Struck out--by Stillman: Flavell, Noble, Keary, White; by Clarkson: White 2, Layton 2, Collier, Jones, Newman, Noble; by Leary: Wendell; by Layton: Murphy, Frantz, Coolidge; by Gross: Frantz, Stillman. Passed ball--Flavell. time--2h. 15m. Umpire--Bett...
...battery work of Laverack and Putnam was very effective, especially when men were on bases. The Dew Drops solved Coburn's pitching early in the game and succeeded in making ten clean hits. Laverack supplemented his good pitching by two three-base hits and a two-base bit. In the last half of the ninth inning the Loafers made three successive hits that brought in two runs, but with a man on first and second the Loafers lost their last chance to win. On a pop fly to Parton, Carr left second and ran home, allowing the Dew Drops...
...also poor. The part of Andrew, his servant, is very well acted by J. G. Brackett '01, who gives an amusing portrayal of the awkward but well meaning servitor. The women in the play are not as good as the men; perhaps Sylvia, H. W. French '01, is a bit less unnatural than her mistress, Angelina, whose part is taken...
...verse is varying in its quality. "Self-Pity" by F. C. Gulick is an introspective sonnet which loses much by the obscurity of its symbolism and a bit of awkward phrasing. In "To a Stuffed Owl" and in "The Interval," W. Bynner has shown his versatility. "What the Sea Shell Told" is a pleasing bit of rhyme, but has no claim to originality of thought or treatment...