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Word: amounts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...weighing the pros. against the cons. as concerns beer at class "smokers," it is well to keep one point in mind: the amount of beer absorbed by the individual at a class smoker has so negligible an alcohol content that it is safe to say a man does not risk a constitutional breakdown as a result. Furthermore, an equal amount of so-called soft drinks, romping in all its effervescence through the channels of ones internal mechanism, has an effect more disastrous to the private welfare than that instigated by the four per cent. of alcohol in beer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Disparages "Temperance" Argument | 1/27/1915 | See Source »

...Junior Dance, to be held in the Union on Friday, February 9. By 6 o'clock this afternoon all applications must be mailed to E. H. Foreman '16, Harvard Union. Applicants should enclose visiting cards with the filled out cards and also a check for the specified amount...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DANCE APPLICATIONS DUE | 1/26/1915 | See Source »

...Horticultural Hall, Boston, this week, for the benefit of the Belgian Relief Fund has been so far a great success. A. N. Rantoul '87, treasurer of the Auxiliary Committee announces that over $3,000 was taken in on Wednesday, the first day of the Kermesse, and the total amount is now considerably more. As there are only two more days of the Kermesse as many undergraduates as possible should attend in order to help in the work of providing for the starving Belgians. The Kermesse is open from 2 o'clock in the afternoon till 10 in the evening. Admission...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHANCE TO HELP BELGIANS | 1/22/1915 | See Source »

Princeton has received an offer of $250,000 from Mrs. Russell Sage, which will be given to the university provided the trustees raise a similar amount by July 1. The fund is being raised for the purpose of erecting a new university dining hall, similar to Memorial Hall, on the Princeton campus. The sophomore class alone has contributed $30,000 to the $75,000 already raised...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Princeton Offered New Dining Hall | 1/16/1915 | See Source »

Business collapses and sporadic production brought about by varied industrial seasons are among the principal causes of our continuous amount of employment, as stated by Mr. Walter Hinkle, of the New England Committee of Intercollegiate Socialists, before the Socialist Club last night. To remedy this condition, the speaker looked not to charity relief, with its principle of "something for nothing," but rather to such reforms as a national system of labor exchanges, restriction of immigration, and possibly also unemployment insurance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Unemployed Remedies Outlined | 1/16/1915 | See Source »

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