Word: pointings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...course on Purchasing, the ad- ministration of the buying departments in manufacturing establishments and other large business enterprises is studied. Methods of testing seasonal fluctuations of prices and analyses of price movements from the point of view of the purchasing agent are given special attention...
...essential to the very life and existence of any nation. This is the reason why we must make our men--all of them--more fit and enduring, more able to withstand hardships. Our college athlete is the fighting type. His spirit, his arms, his legs, are good. The only point where we have in a measure failed is in his setup, the deepening of his chest and the better development of his trunk for suppleness, action and resistive force. That is a point we are remodeling today and the athlete of the future will be more the all-around...
...injury to his knee, however, was bothering him and he had to give way to F. McN. Bacon, whom L. B. Van Ingen supplanted at left wing. Before the period ended, Avery made another goal and R. S. Humphrey, who had been playing an aggressive game at cover-point, made an individual dash up the ice and, unaided by any of his teammates, accounted for the Freshmen's fifth score...
...building of the indispensable implements of modern war, and of the great transport fleet which alone will enable us to utilize our giant strength after we have developed it, must merely spur us on to efficient action in the present and the future. To refuse to see and to point out these failures is both silly and unpatriotic...
...mere accident that has made all the pro-German organs in the press clamor against the men who dare point out our shortcomings, the speaker proceeded to assert, for the pro-Germans know well that our country's ruthless enemies, whom they serve as far as they dare, desire nothing so much as to see this country afraid to acknowledge and make good its shortcomings; and those pro-Germans cloak their traitor-our aid to Germany under the camouflage of pretended zeal to save American officials from just criticism. "But there is an even lower depth," Mr. Roosevelt affirmed...