Word: enough
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Lampoon is found in the drawings. The illustration on the front page, though simple, is yet cleverly done and has the advantage of being well set off by some very appropriate rhymes. Equally good, but in a different way, is the centre-page drawing, which indeed is vivid enough to give the most confirmed grind a start. As for the figures entitled "At the Sophomore-Freshman Game," they have a grotesque realness about them which cannot escape even the most careless observer. So much for the pictures. The rest of the number is well filled with editorials pleasantly harmless, jokes...
...considerably. Parker caught an errorless game and was accurate in throwing to bases. The outfield handled the balls quickly and backed up the infield in good style. For the Sophomores, Perry played the best game, catching cleverly, and stopping many wild pitches. The infield did not handle balls quickly enough and threw poorly. The outfield work was marred by a few errors, but several excellent catches of hard flies easily counterbalanced this...
Harvard was defeated by Haverford Saturday on Soldiers Field by the score of 99 to 101 not out. The game was played in a drizzling rain which became harder as the game progressed, softening the ground enough to affect the bowling considerably. Harvard's bowling suffered more from this than Haverford's, but there were other causes which contributed to the outcome. Haverford's bowling was swift, accurate and effective and their batting was very reliable. Harvard fielded miserably, but this was partly due to the slippery condition of the field...
...Freshman crew squad has now been rowing long enough for the general faults of the candidates to be clearly apparent. The men seem to be awkward, and though they are well up to the average in strength, they do not apply their power well. The crews are still very unsteady. All the men are apt to let their oars fly up at the catch and to weaken at the finish. In fact their power is applied only in the middle of the stroke. This is partly due to the fact that they do not yet stand on their stretchers firmly...
...base when he might have retired a runner. J. D. Clark's work on first was unsatisfactory, and he was awkward in attempts to catch runners off the base. Reid's throwing to first was not as accurate as usual. In the outfield, Higgs and Stillman did not cover enough ground. Frantz led the team in batting, with a three-base hit and two singles, and Clarkson brought in two of the runs with a triple and a double. For Williams Street played a brilliant game at second, and cut off two runs by accepting difficult chances...