Word: coverings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...squarely over third base. Cook came in. The Harvard men were just beginning to cheer when umpire Hartley shouted "foul" and sent Cook back. Then Trenchard broke his finger and time was called. Before play was resumed the rain came down in torrents and the players all got under cover. After waiting the required 30 minutes the umpire called the game off. Wiggin told the Harvard men to leave the field and the whole team hurried over to the little training house in left field where the barges were waiting to carry the players back to the New Haven House...
...make-up. The most important of these was Stevenson's removal from third base to make room for Cook, L. S., who has resumed playing. Whittemore was moved from second base to short-stop to take the place of Winslow. Dean, captain of the freshman nine, was called to cover second base, while Wiggin played in right field in place of McCarthy...
...problems which lie on the border between psychology and pedagogy, and will emphasize the educational bearings of psychical facts. Course B would be given in case a sufficient number of interested persons from course A wished to take it. It would be open to no others. The course would cover the whole field of experimental psychology and psychophysics, in practical laboratory work. It would be important especially for psychologists, teachers, and physicians, who wish to carry on later any experimental psychological studies of their...
...understand will be plain. The riddle of what our life is and towards what end we are working will be solved. The greatest and best thing we can do is to receive the light of God and reflect it again. The greatest mistake a man can make is to cover up this mirror and sit in darkness...
Young engineers that have just received an education are wont to make the mistake of thinking that their theoretical knowledge of engineering gives them an entire control of the subject. Yet they are obliged at last to realize that no text-book can be comprehensive enough to cover all the problems of practical engineering...