Word: clean
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...senior team on Jarvis yesterday afternoon, which rerulted in a score of two to nothing in favor of the former. Bater and Upton were the battery and Soule took Dean's place at second; otherwise the team was unchanged. Clarence Smith '85 coached the team. The nine played a clean game in the field, but were not very effective at the bat. The nine's coaching was poor, several men being caught on bases. The team felt the absence of Captain Dean, and several times the men showed poor judgment in making plays...
...both nines, the freshmen showing a great improvement over some of their recent attempts to play ball. Minton pitched for them and struck out eight men, allowing but four hits. The team batted well and got nine hits off the opposing pitcher, while their fielding was sharp and clean and their base running very fair. The make-up of the teams was as follows...
There is just a slight "flick" at the finish which enables the oars to be brought out of the water clean, and then comes in the feature advocated by J. Watson Taylor-the shooting out of the arms from the body like the "rebound of a billiard ball from the cushion." This gets the shell of the hands easily. The hands are shot a trifle downward, feathering being done at the same time, and then follows the slide forward, in which the ingenuity of Mr. Cook excels. Instead of the eight men letting their bodies move gradually forward...
...Dean one. The outfield played well except for one badly misjudged fly by Dickinson. Hallowell and Frothingham both made beautiful catches, each assisting in a timely double play. Cook at third made a fine catch of a ball thrown high over his head. He also made the only clean hit that Harvard got, and his sacrifice in the fifth inning gave us the best hopes of a run that we had during the game...
...integral part of the world; he may be in it, but not of it. The man who has it finds in all the forces of the world happiness, knowledge and power, and becomes himself a source of these. It is this alone which can keep clean the channels of communication between man and the forces of nature. We mean when we speak of belief in nature, in institutions, in art, an intimate sympathy, a perfect openness of relation, and a frank understanding. And the same is true when we speak of faith in God. It is only this which makes...