Word: sherlocks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...yard Schindel attempt sailed wide right, giving Brown the ball once again.Another aerial assault resulted in another Bears touchdown, but this time the quarterback draw was stuffed short and Brown was left down 31-21.A nearly perfect onside kick was almost recovered by Brown, but senior Neil Sherlock made the recovery for Harvard, flushing all Brown hopes for a comeback.—Staff writer Brad Hinshelwood can be reached at bhinshel@fas.harvard.edu...
...yard Schindel attempt sailed wide right, giving Brown the ball once again.Another aerial assault resulted in another Bears touchdown, but this time the quarterback draw was stuffed short and Brown was left down 31-21.A nearly perfect onside kick was almost recovered by Brown, but senior Neil Sherlock made the recovery for Harvard, flushing all Brown hopes for a comeback.—Staff writer Brad Hinshelwood can be reached at bhinshel@fas.harvard.edu
...complete back,” Dawson said.It’s also three years of being a go-to playmaker.Despite playing in a pass-first offense, last year Dawson averaged 25.8 carries a game; he finished with 1614 all-purpose yards, more than double the total of senior Neil Sherlock, who finished second in the category before switching to defense this season.“I don’t know if we know his limit,” Harvard coach Tim Murphy said. “I think that we sometimes get too comfortable just assuming that he?...
...Screen comedy is at its best when it pitches it tent close to the poverty line. Think Chaplin, who once said that all he needed to be funny was a park, a policeman and a pretty girl. Think Keaton, who once did a brilliant special-effects comedy, (Sherlock, Jr.) , where you were almost unaware of his very subtle camera tricks. Think Grant, Hepburn and their wayward leopard. For that matter, think Something About Mary, which pretty much took place in a cramped apartment. The minute the effects budget swells, it starts to crush the life out of comedy, which needs...
...Thomas’ second novel, and, as in his debut, “Some Danger Involved,” it features the crime-fighting duo of Victorian “private enquiry agent” Cyrus Barker and his young assistant, Thomas Llewelyn. Barker is a sort of Sherlock Holmes on steroids: in addition to possessing a strange omniscience, he is in peak physical condition and can defeat even the most formidable of adversaries in hand-to-hand combat (or, as is inexplicably the case here, stick fighting). He is also a botanist with an Edenic garden, a man with...