Chapter & Verse

A correspondence corner for not-so-famous lost words

F. Markoe Rivinus requests the title and the other words of a song he heard in the late 1950s; he remembers two lines: “You ain’t no bigger than a bug is big/Oh, you cute little thingamajig!”


Harry Goldgar asks if someone can supply the identity of the “Institute” referred to in, and a specific origin for, an “abundantly Googled” cheer he dates to the 1920s or earlier: “Rooty-toot-toot, rooty-toot-toot,/We are the boys from the Institute./We don’t smoke and we don’t chew,/And we don’t go with the girls that do.”


“skywest and crooked” (July-August 2004). Jerry Leath Mills found this expression in Fred Gipson’s 1949 novel Hound Dog Man, in an early account of a raccoon hunt: “that old coon [was] slapping the dogs sky-west and crooked.”


Send inquiries and answers to “Chapter and Verse,” Harvard Magazine, 7 Ware Street, Cambridge 02138.

You might also like

Breaking Bread

Alexander Heffner ’12 plumbs the state of democracy.

Reading the Winds

Thai sailor Sophia Montgomery competes in the Olympics.

Chinese Trade Dragons

How Will China’s Rapid Growth in the Clean Technology Industry Reshape U.S.-China Policy?

Most popular

Breaking Bread

Alexander Heffner ’12 plumbs the state of democracy.

Who Built the Pyramids?

Not slaves. Archaeologist Mark Lehner, digging deeper, discovers a city of privileged workers.

Decoding the Deep

Project CETI’s pioneering effort to unlock the language of sperm whales

More to explore

American Citizenship Through Photography

How photographs promote social justice

Harvard Philosophy Professor Alison Simmons on "Being a Minded Thing"

A philosopher on perception, the canon, and being “a minded thing”