Word: sargent
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Cruel Coasts. The show-and a complementary book called Maine and Its Role in American Art, 1740-1963 (Viking; $10) -raises doubt that the nation's art could have survived without the help of that state. From Gilbert Stuart and John Singleton Copley to John Singer Sargent and George Bellows, from Maurice Prendergast and Childe Hassam to Georgia O'Keeffe and Edward Hopper, from Winslow Homer to John Marin to Andrew Wyeth-artists have taken inspiration from its cruel coasts and rugged landscapes. Marsden Hartley lived there and found his own rough-hewn style admirably suited...
...second hit of the game, beating out a long throw from short to first; but he was out at second on a fielder's choice when captain Dick Diehi knocked the ball down the third-base line. Jim Mullen then came in to pinch-hit for third-base Lee Sargent who had gone hitless. Mullen went hit less, striking...
...seventh innings. Hits for the top of the order were scarce. Tom Bilodeau went two-for-four, but the other three of the first four hitters managed only one hit among them. Givin Gilmor picked up three singles in five trips to the plate, and Dick Diehl and George Sargent, batting seventh and eighth respectively, each went two-for-four. The failure of the usually big hitters to come through or even to get on base hindered the Crimson's offensive efforts considerably...
...Crimson bats were not to be silenced yet. Gavin Gilmor drove a single sharply to left, and George Sargent sent Gilmor scampering to second with another one base blow. Gilmor, however, did not find second base to his liking, and promptly stole third. Dick Diehl then grounded into a double play, and Gilmor scored on the play...
Again in the bottom of the eleventh, with darkness closing in all around, Bilodeau was at the plate with two gone, two men on base, and a two-two count. Another sizzling grounder, again too hot for the third baseman to handle, scored Lee Sargent from second, and the ball game was over...