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Page 280 text:
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B. U. Summer School Tennis Committee XVOODRURY Blum PARIUQR LORD Ml'II.VIN H. PARKER, Mllllflgel' PROP. HUGH W. BARR, Comb 283
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Page 279 text:
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. 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
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Page 281 text:
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. -. . SYLLABUS 1923 j ,. v fi J 'f1' Wmtflmi Summer School Tennis The B. U. summer school at Ellsworth certainly went over big, with everyone there. Fun? Ask Pep CDemosthenesD, or the songf ?D bird, or the man who spoke of jack-rabbit jurisdictions! The tennis tournament was one of the big events of the summer. The matches were played on the estate of judge Peters, of Ellsworth, who proved himself a friend to the school on more than one occasion. There was a surprising bit of clever racquet work shown, which added to the keenness of the contest, and gave the winners a lot of hard work. The tournament finished as follows: Plfinner -- rl!!-IOMAS LoN ERGAN Runner-up - EDWARD Loan DOUBLES JONES AND Joi-INsoN CMaltra Malasj ' vs. SULLIVAN AND ADAMS CCorrejasD 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 OTNEII. AND MURRAY CHolmes Estatej vs. SMITH AND lVIALUF CPzu-ker Housej 416: 9-7: SINGLES DAVIS CGoodwin Hotelj vs. WOIJDIBURY CBar Harborj 6-4, 2-6, 3-6 T1LEsToN CYork Beachj vs. REBELS CNew Jerseyj 6141 6'8v WINGATE CHouse of Devereauxj vs. lVIILLER CContention Covej Won by default Lonergan was presented with a loving-cup, handsomely engraved. Lord, as runner-up, received a silver cigarette case, which was also engraved. The tournament was put across with the same snap and spirit that has made Ellsworth an institution to which Boston University points with pride! LAWRENCE D. STDNE. 284
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