Word: accountants
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...means of bringing together in available forms, brief notes and observations from students and graduates engaged in professional work. It is expected that the bulletin will be issued once a year, or oftener if sufficient material is secured. Among the papers in the present issue are an illustrated account of one year's cutting in the Harvard Forest, a list of the trees and shrubs of the Forest, a description of the use and construction of lumber flumes in California, and a discussion of practical methods of land surveying in forestry. Most of these articles, particularly the list of shrubs...
...account of some misunderstanding incident to the transferral of the functions of the Council of Federated Clubs to the Student Council Committee on Organizations, the latter presents the following statement...
...victory and one defeat from each is the showing that Brown has made against Yale and Princeton, and in the first Pennsylvania contest the Brown team was victorious. The second Pennsylvania game, which was to have been played last Tuesday, had to be called off on account of bad weather...
...Western colleges. A very enthusiastic review is given of "The Mediaeval Mind" by H. O. Taylor '78. From the Bulletin of the Royal Gardens at Kew is reprinted an English view of the Arnold Arboretum in which high praise is given the Arboretum and Professor Sargent. An admirably lucid account is given of the present relations between Harvard and the city of Cambridge, which every Harvard man should read. Another number might well contain an article describing the relations of some of the Western universities to their communities, as, for instance, Wisconsin. R. A. Morton, Jr., '11, advocates a system...
...state of affairs which compels the shopkeepers in and about Harvard square to carry twenty per cent, of their accounts through the summer is a disgrace to every Harvard man personally and to the name of the University. Shopkeepers allow credit as a favor, and they are met by indifference and ingratitude. It is difficult to ascribe any real reason for the prevalent carelessness in money matters except that the student who is able to run up a large bill has not come to the full appreciation of the value of credit. Being careless about the manner in which...