Word: frequenting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...will be the rule from now non, Coach Haines aiming to develop a long-distance eight. A long row at a comparatively high stroke yesterday will be followed by another of the same kind today. Coach Haines sent his first two crews down the length of the Basin with frequent spurts between the two. From the lower end of the Basin they were put through the long five-mile grind to the Newell Boathouse at a steady, uninterrupted pace...
Practice yesterday in preparation for today's race consisted of a short row with frequent spurts, alternating with paddles at a very low stroke. Coach Howe paying special attention to the in board work, and leg work, striving to perfect the final push with the legs-the biggest aid in making the boat run well between strokes...
...help in the transition from college to business is an important reason for the development of these schools, and therefore the personal problems of the young man as he adjusts himself to his new environment should have serious consideration. It is not probable that many of the more frequent mistakes of the beginner in business may be prevented if he has been given a proper perspective on the importance of studying his surroundings and the personality of his associates as well as of mastering the details of his job? There is an insistent demand among business men that college...
Humor benighted in a wilderness of words. Philosophy as ancient sit is petty a more frequent use of capitals than custom (aristocratic custom, but custom nevertheless) allows--that is the Proletarian who for the first time wipes the dust from his shoes and steps into the prior. Nor does he seem a quite at home, naturally enough. Fingers that are more used to the aigrette, than to the pen do not response easily to the new demands; his humor somehow lacks that airy step of one who is well-fed and content with the universe. Yet now that this creature...
...should be possible without any very elaborate machinery to inculcate a more complete uniformity of grades and instruction than certain courses now exhibit. More frequent conferences between lecturer and assistants would undoubtedly help; all section papers might be made out by the lecturer, or at least by the head assistant, with the provision that they be alterable to the contingencies of each particular section. Specimen weekly papers could be collected at frequent intervals from all sections and, as is often done in the case of final examination books, the grades correlated and checked one against the other. All this...