Word: pass
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...into the lead with the gun in the half-mile and it seemed as though he would maintain his position. Jones of Cornell and Paull of Pennsylvania started, but as they had run the mile before, it was not thought that they would place. Bodley of Pennsylvania attempted to pass Putnam at the beginning of the second quarter, but could not oust the Cornell man from the pole. Meanwhile H. Jaques, Jr., '11 had been running easily in third place followed by Jones. At the last turn the real test came, and Jones proved equal to it. He swung wide...
Students who enter Harvard College with the class of 1914 must pass, before they can be admitted to the Junior class, a special oral examination to test their reading knowledge of either French or German. Any member of the class of 1914 who has not already passed this oral examination and wishes to take it during the final period must notify the Recorder, 4 University Hall, in writing, before tomorrow. Each candidate will then be notified when and where to present himself for the oral examination...
Students who enter Harvard College with the class of 1914 must pass, before they can be admitted to the Junior class, a special oral examination to test their reading knowledge of either French or German. any member of the class of 1914 who has not already passed this oral examination and wishes to take it during the final period must notify the Recorder, 4 University Hall, in writing, before Thursday, May 25. Each candidate will then be notified when and where to present himself for the oral examination...
Harvard scored three in the fourth on Minot's single, Harvey's pass and singles by Sexton and Twitchell. In the seventh, the Seniors tallied two more when Johnson and Chase scored on Mills's error, and another two in the eighth when A. Sweetser doubled with men on bases. The final tally came in the ninth after Sexton's infield out with a man on third base...
...base. The Harvard batsmen hit into the air almost entirely, and 15 of them went out on fly balls. The Princeton fielders were lucky in pulling down several sky-scrapers which ordinarily would have gone for hits. Princeton started the scoring in the opening session. De Vito drew a pass and reached third when McLaughlin threw wild to first. White singled, scoring De Vito, and Sterrett got a three-bagger to right field on which White tallied. The squeeze play, successfully worked, enabled White to score. In the third inning White singled, went to third on Sterrett's second...