Word: coping
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...University will play in more than a practice game next Saturday Colby scored twice on flukes; at no other time were they in Tufts danger zone. Wide end runs by Hadley and Wescott, and some beautiful complicated forward passes permitted Tufts to gain at will, Colby being powerless to cope with this open style of play. A triple pass, netting thirty yards, was worked to perfection by the Medford team...
...been shown in what a terrible condition China, with its vast population of 400,000,000, was. There is scarcely a community which has not been at some time the prey of cholera, tuberculosis and the like. China, unaided by the science of the West, has been unable to cope with these conditions. In the entire country, there are but 650 trained physicians, one to every 600,000 people; or, at the same ratio as if there were but one doctor in Boston. There are 250 hospitals in China, averaging 30 beds each, which is as if there were...
...first half opened with the University presenting a complete substitute line, which was totally unable to cope with Yale's aggressive attack. W. Heron scored, the first goal of the contest for Yale after 11 minutes of play on an easy shot from in front of the goal. M. Herron followed this almost immediately by dashing the length of the rink and caging the puck for the second tally...
...instant assume that I object to a serious-minded Radicalism. That type of thought may for all I know be specially now needed to cope with the problems today presenting themselves. In England these problems are acute. I venture to say that the unrest is already far deeper-seated in the English proletariat than it is here; and surely America has need of some well-balanced, if Radical, thinking to meet existing conditions. Toward the solution of the problems of today the universities, both of America and of England, will do well to bend their energies. That, however...
Harvard is fulfilling her part well in this direction. The Medical School has benefitted the whole world by its wonderful discoveries. The College, too, in matters of government, has shown its ability and eagerness to cope with practical problems. Now the Law School, already possessing a high international reputation because of the quality of its training and the spirit of its students, has taken through the students a significant step to give the community the advantages it possesses. Of course, the benefits of the new Legal Aid Bureau will be mutual, both the law students and the community benefitting...