Word: needing
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Take it all in all, then, Harvard's play, though decidedly stronger than it has been in many respects, was very much lacking in team work. In the first hall the interference was very poor and all the rush-line were slow. The men showed the need of more individual coaching. They will have to know the capabilities of their positions more thoroughly before they can be expected to develop a strong team game...
...children. He answered, "It is all very well for you to talk. Mr. Hale, who can take your glass of wine whenever you like. It is easy for you to tell a poor devil like me that I must not drink a glass of rum when I feel the need of it." I then told him that I would not touch wine again for a year if he would not, and the bargain was struck. The fact is that we find we can't afford to belong to an aristocracy who drink. If we would lessen the misery about...
George Adams coached the team as a whole and tried to put some life into it. Mr. Lathrop was out to look out for the tacking. Cranston also was on hand to each centre rush. All the men in the rush line showed evident need of individual coaching...
...there ever was a time when the captain of a Harvard eleven needed the services of all the available foot ball material in the college it is now. The eleven is badly crippled, and the material at hand is not sufficient to strengthen it adequately. There are men in college whom everybody would like to see playing foot ball. If such men could sink personal considerations and see only the urgency of the need calling them, the difficulty would be in a fair way toward solution. Of course it is a delicate matter to urge men to lay aside their...
...produces nothing ugly. Aside from the beauty of exactness and invariability that the laws of Creation have for mathematical minds in particular and for du ler ones in a less degree, the visible manifestations of the infinite Reason are the most familiar parts of human existence. There is little need of presenting any of these pictures, and yet their very familiarity makes them often unimpressive and obscures much of their splendor. The night, with its stars moving with in evitable accuracy or a day of sunlight or one of clouds and wind are too common...