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Word: due (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...practice of the University football squad yesterday afternoon was ragged, and entirely lacking in the life and snap which characterized the first week of regular play. This poor showing, however, was undoubtedly due in a large measure to the absence in the line-up of many of the regular first team players and substitutes. Nesmith, Brill, Hanley and Frazer did not report owing to recent slight injuries, and Nichols, Oveson, Reynolds and Osborn, who have been out of the game for the past few days, although on the field again, did not engage in the scrimmage...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NO IMPROVEMENT YESTERDAY | 10/7/1904 | See Source »

...text: "Where the spirit of the Lord is there is liberty." He was followed by Bishop Lawrence, who spoke briefly on religion as part of the normal and natural life, neglect of which by the college man must mean irreparable loss. Indifference to religion by the college man is due, he said, not so much to doubts or to sin as to the habit of drifting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: First Services in Appleton-Chapel. | 10/3/1904 | See Source »

...best work, making a net gain of over 60 yards in some half dozen exchanges. The fast work of Pope, left guard on the second, in getting down the field under the punts was noticeable. There was much fumbling in the handling of kicks, which was probably largely due to the heavy wind. There were again numerous changes in the line-up of the first eleven: Meier was put in at left tackle in place of Brill, McFadon was moved over to right guard to replace White, and Wilder went in at left guard. Blagden was shifted from left...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD VS. WILLIAMS | 10/1/1904 | See Source »

...proud. But coming as it does at the beginning of a year it reduces to the minimum the suspicion of its being a merely temporary improvement and practically assures the permanence of innovations, of no inconsiderable moment, and a return to a sane view of what is due to a college man from a magazine published supposedly for his benefit. In this light the latest development of the Monthly as showing in its first number has its chief significance. Whether former editors will object to a change in policy which relegates to the memories of the past graduate articles...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The New Monthly. | 9/29/1904 | See Source »

Captain Carr said that the spirit shown this year has been of the first order. Every man is glad that all the others are on the nine, and glad that he himself is playing on it. In practice the friction necessarily due to hard work has been unusually small...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BASEBALL MASS MEETING | 6/23/1904 | See Source »

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