Word: deal
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...first consolation cross-country run was held over the Chestnut Hill course yesterday afternoon. Taken as a whole, the meet was very successful and brought to light a good deal of promising material. Coach Shrubb first took the Freshman squad over the three-mile course and at the finish of this race, the University squad ran the five-mile distance. In this race, the men finished in the following order: 1, P. R. Withington '12; 2, F. W. Copeland '13; 3, R. St. B. Boyd '14; 4, C. W. Burrage '13; 5, H. M. Warren '13; 6, W. H. Lacey...
There was no scrimmage yesterday afternoon for the University squad, signal practice being held for about twenty minutes. Individual coaching constituted a large part of the afternoon's work and a good deal of attention was paid towards making the defence for the punters more effective. Fisher and Potter were given practice in kicking goals and the latter tried several field-goals...
...University baseball squad was given a long practice on Soldiers Field yesterday afternoon, Coach Sexton devoting a great deal of time to instructing the candidates in the fine points of their positions. Special emphasis was laid upon the handling of ground balls. After the fielding practice Coach Sexton spent some time in teaching the fall-away slide. This play requires much practice, but as it is often the deciding factor as to whether a base-runner is out or safe, the instruction is valuable...
...wonder whether they are worth while. But it is this small and doubtful work which is really the true service. The small problems which a student worker meets in social service serve the two-fold purpose of helping the world a little and relieving his own mind of constant dealings with the great theoretical problems of the classrooms. It is stimulating and healthful to ask students to deal with both sorts of problems. The world grows better by small items, not by leaps and bounds, and these small items are furnished by social service work. It is good...
...many ways to one accustomed to the sanitary regulations and comparatively wholesome conditions existing in the Western world. Disease from its mildest to its most hideous forms is diffused throughout China's four hundred millions of people. Up to the present time hardly any efforts have been made to deal with the abominable situation in a scientific manner. Ignorance of the sources of disease and of the ways in which disease is spread is universal. The great mass of the people believes that the gods send epidemics, or that heaven wills that cholera or the bubonic plague should carry...