• The KillerFrogs

#BAYLORTEARS

Purp

Active Member
I used some site that calculated it. I blame them.
I'd blame them too. Maybe there's a technicality that I'm not aware of, but Baylor was established at some point in 1845 according to Google. Assuming it was January 1st, 1845 that's 175 years before the start of this year. At 52 weeks per year you're at 9,100 weeks. Add another 8 weeks into this year and you're at 9,108 weeks. No clue what day in 1845 Baylor was established, but the website must be using a date in 1844 for the establishment of Baylor. Even adding in leap days you only get 6 or 7 more weeks.
 

RollToad

Baylor is Trash.
I'd blame them too. Maybe there's a technicality that I'm not aware of, but Baylor was established at some point in 1845 according to Google. Assuming it was January 1st, 1845 that's 175 years before the start of this year. At 52 weeks per year you're at 9,100 weeks. Add another 8 weeks into this year and you're at 9,108 weeks. No clue what day in 1845 Baylor was established, but the website must be using a date in 1844 for the establishment of Baylor. Even adding in leap days you only get 6 or 7 more weeks.
Feb 1st. That’s the date I used.
 

GenXFrog

Active Member
I'd blame them too. Maybe there's a technicality that I'm not aware of, but Baylor was established at some point in 1845 according to Google. Assuming it was January 1st, 1845 that's 175 years before the start of this year. At 52 weeks per year you're at 9,100 weeks. Add another 8 weeks into this year and you're at 9,108 weeks. No clue what day in 1845 Baylor was established, but the website must be using a date in 1844 for the establishment of Baylor. Even adding in leap days you only get 6 or 7 more weeks.


Let's not forget that there are 365 days in a year. Add those 175 extra days that were left out of the 52*175 calculation. (25 more weeks)
 
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