Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA)

 - Class of 1923

Page 279 of 321

 

Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 279 of 321
Page 279 of 321



Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 278
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Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 280
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Page 279 text:

. 4 SYLLABUS 1923 i . ? NOTE nv THE Euirons. Prof. Bellatski is now up in the air. With his mind on fishing he rambles for fourteen paragraphs. l-le discusses trout, salmon, bass, perch, eels, pickerel, cunners, sculpins, hake, halibut and cod. He tells his experiences at Brimmer's Bridge, Reed's Brook Medder, Boggy Brook, Molasses Pond and Bill Day's Landing. NVhat he -writes may be interesting, but it hasn't anything to do with the ball game, and we don't believe that a word of it is true! We offer as a conclusion to the story of the game the following summary which we clipped from the sporting page of the New York TilllL'.Y,' THE SCORE 1 2 3 RUNS HITS ERRORS Faculty IO I5 I7 42 55 C Students 0 o o o o o Summary: Two base hit, Babb, three base hits, Goggin 2, Maloof 3, Isenberg 4. Home runs, Bellatty 7, Balk, Cy'Bostwick. Double plays, Hobbs to L. Pitcher to Roberts to Woodbury, Eddie Lord to Hostetler to Sullivan, Thomas to Mclver to Anselmo to Roberts, Isenberg to Hostetler to Goggin. Triple play, Babb, unassisted. Struck out by Goggin, McPhee, Sturtevant, P. A. Greene. Wild pitches, Carberg I4. Passed balls, DuBois 29. Time of game, one semester and 50 minutes. Attend- ance, 4600, not counting students in extra mural courses. Umpire, Hardboiled Horri- gan, King of the Yeggs, THE HOUSE OF DEVEREAUX Many a passing tourist wondered at the Boston Universityn placard that looked out from the porch at IO High Street. Wh was it there? Because the Gwedvecs 0 I r y 1 l were summering in Ellsworth. It is of them that I will write. Each of us had his own particular interests. Winnie had his wildly careening Fordg Dick his Packard or Peerless fit didn't matter much whichjg George his Pauline, Walter his gliding hoof, Carl his Law 4 notesg Earle his week-end trips to Bar Harbor or Northport, and Vic, well, he just tagged along anywhere. But we met on common ground when infantry polo was mentioned. The com- mon ground was our neighbor's lawn, which was the best polo field in town. Each forgot for the time being his own peculiar interests. At least, we forgot them until the need for a few assorted new rules displayed itself. Earle was the author of the rule book and he published a new edition each day and sometimes oftener. Prof. Babb was often our guest. He had learned the science of infantry polo in England and many of us were obliged to bow to his skill as a mallet wielder. What a stroke he did have! It started -at the ground and described a half-circle twice before it hit the ball. Carl was undisputed champion among us and he several times enjoyed the privilege of defeating the Prof. at his own game. Of course all this excitement took place between periods of resurrecting the Hivver and periods of somnolenee in the Capital and Labor Class. Several of our number played baseball after a fashion, and under the leadership of Winnie and the management of Dick, aided the Hancock Point team in defeating the second team- almost. 282

Page 278 text:

'F SUMMER SCHOOL I CARBERG WAS NEVER BETTER At the bat the winning team was a whirlwind. Ten men faced student pitcher Carberg in the first inning, and I4 hit safely in the second. And this happened in the face of the fact that Carberg had everything in the world in the way of speed, control and confidence. As Joe Stultz would say, in the rough and ready language of the B.U. News, Carberg was going good l In order to save the lives of the student outfielders and to reduce the terrific over- head expense because of knocking high flies into Frenchman's Bay and Trenton Woods and losing baseballs at 552 each the faculty ceased batting in the third inning and retired with only one out. That man had been hit by a batted ball. Student after student walked up to the plate and struck out or popped weakly to the stone-wall infield of the Faculty. PROFESSOR BABB A SECOND SPEAKER ln center field stood Prof. Hugh W. Babb, who as a ground coverer is second, perhaps, only to lllr. Tristram Speaker of the Pittsburg Wliite Sox. Prof. Babb soon felt that he would have never a chance for a putout. He improved his time by picking and eating a quart or two of blueberries, which, spiced with pennyroyal, sorrel, high- land cranberries and a few succulent plantain leaves, kept his Down East appetite in check until the clams were ready. NO FLIES-PLENTY OF JUMPERS Having nothing to do in left field in the fly-catching line the writer devoted his energies to catching grasshoppers. These locusts abound in the wild sections of Maine and may be taken alive when once the hunter acquires the knack of attacking from the flank of the creature with one hand and on the bias line of its position with the other. fl'rof. Whitehead will soon bring out a book on How to Make Money Catching Grasshoppersf' with an introductory chapter by Dr. Chamberlin on The Psychology of the Preapproachf' 34.98 a copy at the college supply shops.-Ad-v.j The writer hastens to say to Dean Lord or to any student of Personal Efficiency that with the 169 green grasshoppers and two extra hindlegs captured in left field as the game progressed, a fishing companion of the following week end, lVIr. Royal K. Hayes, succeeded in landing, practically unaided, two orange-tawny sunfish, only slightly under the legal limit for length, a very rare variety of game fish known as a yellow perch, and a piebald hornpout that was both large and nervous. HAYES MEETS VIC GREENE'S COUSIN It is only fair to say, however, that the expression on the features of the tempera- mental bullhead to which reference has been made so reminded Hayes of Vic Greene emerging from a hard-earned nap in Capital and Labor, that Royal K. pushed the reptile back into Branch Pond and swore off on fishing for the summer. 281



Page 280 text:

B. U. Summer School Tennis Committee XVOODRURY Blum PARIUQR LORD Ml'II.VIN H. PARKER, Mllllflgel' PROP. HUGH W. BARR, Comb 283

Suggestions in the Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) collection:

Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 92

1923, pg 92

Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 122

1923, pg 122

Boston University School of Management - Syllabus Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 172

1923, pg 172


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