Word: agents
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...third of the series of meetings under the auspices of the Business School Club will be held this evening at 7.30 o'clock in the Quiet Room of the Union. Mr. Frederick Curtis, Federal Reserve Agent, and Chairman of the Board of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, will speak on "The Federal Reserve Banks in the Business Crisis". The meeting will be open, not only to students in the Business School, but to all undergraduates of the University who contemplate entering the Business School or who are interested in the particular topic under discussion...
...general knowledge of European affairs, his experience at the Paris Peace Conference, and the fact that he has been in Russia and speaks Russian. In the winter of 1890-91 he was acting secretary of the American Legation at St. Petersburg, and he visited Russia in 1918 as special agent of the State Department. He has been granted leave of absence from his University work until September, 1922, by the Corporation...
...Supervision and Control of Welfare Institutions. John F. Moors '83, A. M., LL. D., President, Family Welfare Society of Boston, lecturer on Emergency Relief. Thomas C. O'Brien A. B., Commissioner of Institutions, City of Boston, lecturer on Administration of Municipal Welfare Institutions. William H. Pear '89, General Agent, Boston Provident Association, lecturer on Endowed Charities. Stockton Raymond, General Secretary, Family Welfare Society of Boston, lecturer on Administration of Welfare Institutions...
...little or nothing. The idea, first of all, is to get calm. Then the faculties can begin to work in an orderly fashion. This relaxation can be induced, of course, without music, simply by sitting still and letting the mind drift. But music is a powerful agent of relaxation, because it so operates on us without our being conscious of the process...
...paid to a designated third person twenty-five years from the date of the policy. The writer complains that the insurance companies demand a premium high enough to cover five times the risk of a child of one dying before he reaches the age of eighteen. Indeed, one agent told him that the risk was so low that the commission did not pay for the trouble of handing. All the companies consulted denied that there was any demand for such a policy...