Word: aids
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Return postal requests for text books for the Text Book Loan Library in Brooks House have been sent out to Seniors. This library has been a source of considerable aid to a large number of members of the University who find it difficult to purchase all books needed in their courses. The serviceableness of the library has been seriously limited, however, by the relatively small number of volumes it contains. It is hoped that the usefulness of this depository will be considerably increased at this time, and the committee will gladly call for even a single volume, or, if preferred...
...Text Book Loan Library at Phillips Brooks House, a great number of the students in the University find a very material aid in their College work. There are kept in this collection copies of as many books as possible in which reading is required by the instructors in large courses. As no special provision is made for purchasing such books, they must be gathered from men who are willing to give for this purpose the books which they no longer...
...Fiske's benefit performance in aid of the Animal Rescue League will be given in the Hollis Street Theatre this afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mrs. Fiske will play in the fourth act of "Becky Sharp" and immediately afterwards in the fourth act of "Tess of the d'Urbervilles." The program will also include recitations by Mr. Holbrook Blinn, and original monologues by Miss Beatrice Herford...
...Fiske and her Manhattan Company will give a benefit performance in aid of the Animal Rescue League in the Hollis Street Theatre on Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The program will include the fourth act of "Becky Sharp," followed by the fourth act of "Tess of the d'Aubervilles." Mr. Holbrook Blinn and Miss Beatrice Herford will also furnish part of the entertainment, the former by reciting, and the latter by giving some of her original monologues...
...Gill, who made the third speech for Harvard, said that the affirmative merely offset the causes for the decline of our merchant marine by governmental aid; the negative wants to remove these causes entirely. A removal of the protective tariff would accomplish this by lowering not only wages but the cost of construction and operation. This would give us an American merchant fleet, not by an enormous expenditure on subsidization but by putting the shipping industry on a sound business basis. A removal of the tariff would give us a naval reserve, for it would cause the withdrawal...