Word: dates
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...reason for the loss is ascribed to a larger number of memberships in the athletic association, entitling each member to free admittance to all games, rather than to smaller crowds at the games. The report is not the complete one for the year. It covers only the period to date. By the end of the baseball season that sport will have netted a considerable sum, although at present there is a deficit, due to the cancellation of several important games because of unfavorable weather conditions...
...accordance with the resolutions creating the committee, instructors have been requested to report "all students whose use of English has been unsatisfactory, whether in the matter of clear and orderly thought or in the details of expression." Up to the present date, 235 students have been reported, distributed as follows: Regular undergraduates, 195 Unclassified undergraduates, 33 Students out of course, 2 Special student, 1 Graduate students...
...during the last five or six games. The fielding average, however, has gone down appreciably, from .956 to .946. Harte continues to head the list with the high average of .400, while Coolidge, Mahan, and Beal, all regulars, are well up in the .300 class. Up to date the team has drawn 96 bases on balls. Abbot heads the run-getters with a total of 21 trips across the plate and Coolidge leads in pilfered bases with 12. Coolidge as lead-off man also is first in drawing passes with 13 free trips to his credit...
...undersigned is responsible for this property, it is hoped that there will be no delay in enabling him to check the articles above mentioned so that they may be properly turned over to the University authorities at the earliest practicable date. C. CORDIER. Captain, U. S. Army...
...written in the headlines of certain American newspapers, with the actual course of events would be an amusing, though profitless, occupation. Second, it is impossible to understand the progress of a campaign without a map of the field of operations. Third, it must be remembered that the date and place at the head of the dispatches are often put on in the office and so cannot be relied upon to indicate the source. Fourth, nearly all the cablegrams coming to us from any part of the world are subjected to British censorship, and the wireless messages from Berlin are subjected...