Word: cotton
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...American statistician gradually evolved the system of individual classification with the concentration method. For this method there is a classification of weekly wages and a determination of percentages of the number receiving those wages. When this concentration system is used in connection with one industry, as for instance, cotton goods manufacture, the greatest percentage of laborers is found to be employed on the lowest class of labor. When applied to all industries the concentration system shows the weight of numbers to be on a higher grade of labor. This form of table is now used in the United States...
...well after punts. The line-up was as follows: Freshmen. Andover. Burgess, r.e. l. e., Burke. Jones, r.t. l.t., Botchford. Jackson, r.g. l.g., Weeks. Bleakie, c. c., Chace. C. H. Robinson, l.g. r.g., Kinney. Dodge, l.t. r.t., Coonley, Bissell. Hutchinson, Thayer, l.e. r.e., Matthews. Robinson, q.b. q,b., Cotton. Pruyn, l.h.b. r.h.b., Stoddard, Collins. Lindsay, Mackay, r.h.b. l.h.b., Reeves. Meier, Skilton, f.b. f.b., Levine, Owsley...
...Rise of the Cotton States...
...Ascendency of the Cotton States in the Union...
...human teaching that Mr. Eaton hoped for will be an innovation, and if the right man be found, will be a great step in advance. The other special articles are sufficiently explained by their titles,--"The Harvard Meleager," by R. Norton '92; "The Harvard Law Clubs," by J. P. Cotton, Jr., '96; "What The Associated Clubs Have Done," by F. H. Gade '93; and "The Coming of the Cuban Teachers" by the editor...