Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...attends Harvard University should have the opportunity of taking some systematic form of physical exercise. The exercises offered for selection should cover the broadest possible range, including every kind of athletic sport and gymnastic game. Before making his choice, the student should have a physical examination and the benefit of expert advice as to what exercise he may best follow. The final selection, however, should be optional with the student, except in those cases where prohibition is necessary to protect from injury. After the student has made his choice, if he devotes an amount of time equivalent to at least...
Each club which joins the Lantern Slide Interchange is required to submit a set of not less than fifty slides of a high standard, carefully prepared, and with descriptive notes for the benefit of the exhibitor. From these the sets for exchange are selected. As there are now twenty-two clubs in the Interchange and only fifteen sets of slides, it is necessary to have one set used by three clubs in one month...
There has been for some time a growing desire among a considerable number of men in college for instruction in the more difficult gymnastic work, such as exercises on the parallel bars and on the horse. For the benefit of these men a class in heavy gymnastics has been formed. Mr. Max Kreidel of the Boston Turn Verein, who took first place in parallel bar work at the winter meeting of the Athletic Association last year, has been engaged to lead the class. He will be at the Gymnasium every day from...
...amount of the total tax levied gets into the treasury. - (1) Paid directly into the hands of the government: Nation, IX, 452 (1869). - (b) Its operation does not have the deleterious effect of tariff taxes. - (1) It does not affect the normal distribution of capital. - (2) It does not benefit one class over another. - (c) Its operation improves the longer it is tried: Richard T. Ely, Political Economy, 257. - (d) The incidence of the tax can not be shoved on to some other individual or other class...
...given tonight by Professor Peabody to the teachers of the Prospect Union. This is the first meeting of the year of the students interested in the Union, and it is greatly to be desired that every teacher and every man who intends to teach should be present. For the benefit of those who have not heard of the Prospect Union before, we may say that it is an evening college in Cambridgeport with between five hundred and a thousand students managed wholly by the undergraduates of Harvard University. It is wholly dependent for its existence on the continuance...