Word: accountants
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...competition by seeing the business manager some time during the day. The conditions of the competition will be outlined and work will commence immediately. This consists mainly of soliciting advertisements and subscriptions, with a small amount of office work, and the general business efficiency shown is taken into account. The training in and knowledge of business customs acquired in a competition of this sort are enough in themselves to amply repay for the time put into it. The successful candidates will be chosen shortly after Christmas...
...yesterday's CRIMSON it was announced that Professor William Allen Neilson had been unable to fulfill his duties as Exchange Professor to France during the past year on account of the war. This, however, was not the case, as Professor Neilson lectured at the Sorbonne from December until Easter and spent only a week at Berlin. He has already returned to Cambridge to resume his work at the University...
...right from the entrance hall a corridor leads to the offices of Professor Coolidge, the director, and a room for the Library Council and Syndics of the University Press. On the south side of the corridor is the "Treasure Room" where are kept books most prized on account of their former ownership or because of their rarity...
...further evidence in the number. Professor Merriman writes a vivid account of "A Day at the French Front," and Mr. Cutler gives some illuminating matter relating to the ambulance work undertaken by the University medical units. There is ample proof contained in "War Notes" that Harvard men have worked and fought, and some have died, upon European battlefields; and that honorable and unselfish service has been rendered...
...array of substantial articles, there is a complete record of student affairs and athletics during the past months, togeth-with other information of all sorts which interests Harvard men. The undergraduate should not be frightened away by the name; for the Graduates' Magazine contains a most complete and convenient account of his own multifarious doings. And it enters upon its twenty-fourth year with strong promise of continuing unbroken the series of splendid volumes which have hitherto made it indispensable in Harvard circles and have extended its influence to regions beyond...