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Word: clustering (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...sixth inning resulted in two runs, on hits by Foster and Beaman, a passed ball, an error by Cooper, and two put-outs. Princeton scored its final run in the seventh on a two-base hit by Bickham, a single by Van Ausdal, and an error. Harvard produced a cluster of hits in this inning, and ran the score up to ten by four runs on hits by Foster, Beaman, Tilden and Nichols, aided by two costly errors. The eighth was opened by Willard's flying out, and Smith's retirement on strikes; Foster hit safely and reached third...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE EXHIBITION GAME. | 6/3/1885 | See Source »

...been affected by so many improvements, as Holmes' Field; and no part can to-day give more emphatic evidence of the continued and rapid growth of the University. Seniors and juniors of to-day remember the field as something rather unsightly, swampy in some places, with an occasional cluster of willows, which, with one or two striking exceptions, were of exceedingly poor growth, and bordered by the Hospital and the Society building on the north, the old Holmes House on the north, the old Holmes House on the west. and the Gymnasium and Lawrence Scientific School on the south...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Holmes' Field. | 4/28/1885 | See Source »

...memories, perhaps, are more pleasant than those that cluster about one's college days. To us, however, this college life is a vivid reality; it has not yet slipped by and into the musty past. But something akin to the feelings of some graduate of the '60's must be those that many of us experience in looking back over the years spent at the training schools at which we fitted for college. Many a friendship formed at school still endures, now that we are in college, and bids fair to remain constant through life. No wonder, then, that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/15/1885 | See Source »

...looked upon as a curiosity, but now, instead of being the exception, he is fast becoming the rule. The interest which the students show in this pastime is not surprising. Nowhere so much as at college does the student wish to perpetuate the pleasant memories of faces which cluster around his life. the pleasure of looking over in future years some old photographs of past friends and scenes of college life, taken by himself or by his friends, would undoubtedly be a great one to a graduate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/4/1884 | See Source »

...gradually diminishing, not from the causes usually given - the failure of the labor system, the absence abroad of President White, co-education, attacks of the religious press and the raising of the standard in studies - but because the university no longer represented clearly-defined ideas about which students could cluster. The character of Cornell's students had accordingly deteriorated; they were not now such men of force as formerly, only one of the leading colleges being as low as, or inferior to it in this regard. The attitude of the faculty toward the students in their methods of government...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 5/2/1883 | See Source »

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