Word: method
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...time when so many eyes are watching the football contests at Cambridge and New Haven, it may be instructive to review the records of the two universities since 1889, and consider the method and policy under which the game has been developed at each university, and the results which have followed as a natural outcome...
...head coach; the man who is the brain and hand of the captain; the teacher, drill-master, critic, field-manager, guide, philosopher, disciplinarian, oxar, and drudge all in one. Assisting him (at both Harvard and Yale) is a corps of coaches, who work under specific instructions as to method and policy...
...plan of construction used in the vicinity of Harvard Square is known as the "open-cut" method. As the name implies, the excavation is carried on from the surface. Cable-ways and hoisting machines, all electrically operated, are used as a means of removing the material, which is employed in reclaiming land along the Charles River. Through the Square the subway consists of two parallel tubes. The tube in which trains go toward Boston is of a slightly lower level than the other. This difference in level is to make it more convenient for passengers coming from Boston who wish...
...meeting held in Upper Massachusetts last evening was very well attended, nearly 300 men being present. Captain Withington spoke first and urged everybody to go out for the team. He then told of the present system of coaching the Freshman team and explained that it was based on the method employed with the University squad. H. C. Dewey '12, the head coach of the Freshmen, pointed out the necessity for enthusiasm on the part not only of the candidates for the team, but also of the whole class. This combination is needed to make a winning team...
...Socialism," the government of the future "will be founded upon profound inequality." Mr. Lippmann follows with a defence of Socialism, scarcely less fervid. "That Socialism," says Mr. Sheahan, "should gain enthusiastic recruits from the field of literature and from the colleges is disgraceful." "Until we drop the scholastic method in politics," says Mr. Lippmann, "and substitute the method of induction, we shall continue to wallow in misunderstanding and futility." Both papers are of interest...