Word: scoring
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...toward resuming athletic relations and amicable feelings toward each other in their respective alma maters. Elsewhere in today's issue an account of the baseball game between the Harvard Lampoon and the Princeton Tiger is given, and though, to be sure, this was a sham ball game and no score was kept, still the match may perhaps give an opening for peace conferences between the two universities...
Lining out eight successive hits in the--fifth inning of yesterday's ball game with Colby, Harvard's baseball team scored eight runs and wiped out a six run lead that the Maine team had amassed in the earlier innings and put the game on ice, eventually winning by a score...
...shoulders of Page this afternoon for he is long overdue to take his place on the mound. He has not pitched since he faced the George-town team, in the third contest of the Southern trip and came out on the short end of a 4 to 2 score despite some crafty south pawing. He was scheduled to pitch one of the games last week but when ball games were continually being called off on account of the weather the interim between his turns in the mound was becoming longer and longer...
...chorus (17 artist-students from the Curtis Institute of Music) which chanted and wailed in Greek fashion. And important as either principals or chorus were lights. For Arnold Schönberg, being a painter as well as a composer, has a passion for color. He conceived his score with fading and blazing lights in mind. In the beginning the Man lies prostrate in the darkness with a monstrous batlike creature crouched on top of him. Then at the climax a piercing yellow fills the stage as the storm comes up, symbolic of the Man's premonition of impending doom...
...made him learn German, unaided, from a grammar; which on his recent Oriental tour led him to travel for weeks under the most primitive conditions to listen to native music unadorned; which enables him so to concentrate on his music that in his concerts he never needs a score. In matters musical no one can exceed Stokowski's capacity for work. Nor has anyone maintained toward music a more open mind. For, although Bach, Beethoven, Brahms and Wagner have stayed his first loves, he has had time and bursts of enthusiasm for Stravinsky, Schönberg. Sibelius, Skriabin...