Word: bolded
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Tyng, c. Newman, b. Thorp, 0 Extras, 3 33 EVERETT. Mariett, run out, 1 Dixon, b. A. Tyng, 0 Graham, b. F. Taylor, 1 Newman, c. W. Taylor, b. F. Taylor, 0 Thorp, c. W. Taylor, b. Stork, 32 Bolger, c. D. Tyng, b. F. Taylor, 0 Bold, c. Trainer, b. A. Tyng, 2 H. Smith, b. F. Taylor, 9 Holden, c. F. Taylor, b. Stork, 3 A. Smith, b. W. Taylor, 4 Wright, not out, 0 Extras...
...criticism is not that we are suffering from generally incompetent officers. We get surprisingly good men, as Dean Briggs has said, but we leave the chance open for incompetents, and sometimes we get them. Our system offers great rewards for one bold political "hold-up" in the Freshman year, and usually it is tried and sometimes it succeeds. Worst of all, if the class has a well-grounded dissatisfaction over any class officer, opposition to his re-election cannot be organized without dragging into the discussion personalities which must be distasteful to everybody. It is largely because of this that...
...first presentation of Corneille's "Le Menteur" was given by the Cercle Francais last night in Brattle Hall before a large number of graduates and friends of the club. It was rather a bold step taken by the Cercle Francais when they decided to produce such a play as "Le Menteur." This is by far the most ambitious piece ever presented here and its success was by no means assured, as the play is not easy...
Perhaps the best piece of writing in the number is the poem on "The Bold Subscription Man" which fits in well with a current popular air. The parody is unusually clever, and the characteristics of the "subscription fiend" are well depicted. Next in merit is "The Goody Destructa," another animal from "Lampy's Menagerie," which is fast growing to a fine and entertaining collection...
...than Moliere, who was apt to censure the vices of his time in thoughtful and didactic works. Labiche, nevertheless, borrowed much from Moliere, and, in fact he and his contemporaries were "gleaners of Moliere's harvest." One of Moliere's most successful types, that of the bourgeois who is bold abroad but with his wife "timide," is often well used by Labiche. "L'Auvergnat," acted by the Cercle Francais in 1888--"Le Voyage de M. Perrichon" and "La Poudre aux Yeux," also produced by the Cercle, are three of his most successful plays. Others of his best known works...