Word: barring
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...left-hand upright will be formed by men sitting in section 33, rows O to R inclusive, W to DD inclusive, II and JJ, seats 10, 11, 12, 13; and rows S to V inclusive, EE to HH inclusive, seats 7, 8, 9, 10. The cross-bar will be formed by men sitting in section 32, rows Y, Z, AA, BB, seats 14 to 21 inclusive, and section 33, rows Y, Z, AA, BB, seats 1 to 8 inclusive...
...give a talk on some of his personal experiences in the Orient at a meeting of the History Club in Conant Common Room this evening at 8 o'clock. Sir Edwin has lived in Constantinople since 1873 and for many years has been at the head of the European bar there. He went there as a correspondent for the London Daily News and it was largely due to his reports in 1876 in regard to the Bulgarian atrocities that public sentiment was so aroused in England just before the Russo-Turkish...
Yale was extremely lucky in defeating Colgate 7 to 3 in a game in which the Eli eleven was completely outplayed. Early in the game, West of Colgate put a goal from placement over the bar, and the Maroon team held this slight lead until the last quarter, when Legore caught a forward pass and crossed the goal line for the touchdown that won the game. This lone score came after the Colgate halfback, Hubbell, had been so hurried in his punting that he had been unable to kick the ball accurately, and it went outside on his 20-yard...
Yale made three attempts to score goals from the field, but none of these succeeded. Legore tried the first of these from the 35-yard line, and Braden tried the other two. Braden's attempts just missed being successful, one hitting an upright and the other the cross-bar of the goal posts...
...were given orders to go to Verdun, on June 23. There followed a three-day trip across France, stopping the first night in the outskirts of Paris, traveling through the beautiful and historic Marne valley, camping on the banks of the river the second night and then on to Bar-le-Duc, through town after town in complete ruins as a result of the first onrush of the Germans...