Word: nine
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...made by the Athletic Committee at its last meeting, there will be no intercollegiate baseball games this spring, but there will be several informal games, as well as inter-battalion and inter-dormitory contests, and the usual outside Freshman schedule. Hugh Duffy, who was in charge of the University nine last year, will coach this spring not only the informal, but also the Freshman team...
...informal games will be with nearby service, professional and amateur teams. Just when inter-battalion contests will be started is uncertain, but they will be largely for the men who are not up to the standard of the two first teams. A 1921 inter-dormitory schedule of approximately nine games, similar to those of 1915 and 1916, will be started soon after the first Freshman squad is chosen...
Before we seize our satchels and dive into the subway to leave Cambridge for ten days of food and rest from nine o'clocks and other terrors of a college existence we should make sure that we have not forgotten to say Merry Christmas and good-bye to our friends among the fifty-one fortunates who are leaving us for Yaphank. These men are starting down the path that leads to commissions and France, and many of them may not have a chance to return here before going "over there." This is their Commencement Day; we still have to await...
...spent last summer in Russia as a member of the American Red Cross Mission. Our party consisted of twenty-nine men and included specialists in medicine, bacteriology, hospital management, food, sanitation, and sociology. Colonel Frank Buildings of Chicago was in command of the expedition. We left Boston on June 29, crossed the Pacific in ten days, and then took the long ride of thirteen days across Siberia and Russia to Petrograd, where we arrived August 7. The object of the Mission was to give aid to the Russian people in their prosecution of the war by furnishing needed supplies...
...international entertainment will be given by the Cosmopolitan Club of the University in Peabody Hall, Phillips Brooks House, next Wednesday, December 19, at 8 o'clock. At that time a program of ten numbers, representing nine different countries, will be offered by the members of the Club, assisted by a few foreign students from Boston and its vicinity. The entertainment will be open to the public, admission being by tickets, which may be bought at the Co-operative Branch Store for 35 cents. Refreshments will be served...