Word: board
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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When the Harvard Dining Association was in the throes of despair last winter in its attempts to maintain a respectably large membership and at the same time keep down the price of the general board, the Corporation decided to lend its aid. A fixed guaranty of four dollars was finally decided upon and the new scheme of allowances for absences and the establishing of table for transients seemed at the time to warrant the guaranty. After the guaranty was removed, however, the boarders were left to the tender mercies of the Association and the Corporation withdrew...
Figures have recently been compiled for the month of October which show that during the first month of the College year the general board cost each member of the Association $4.67. This is considerably greater than the estimates made last year and is probably as high as it has ever been. Evidently something more than the general increase in the cost of living has been accountable for this difference. It seems the trouble has been due largely to a miscalculation in regard to the transient tables. Men eating at these tables have been able to board generously on an average...
Even when this trouble has been adjusted satisfactorily, it seems doubtful if the Association can reduce the cost of board to the figure which they expected when the new plan was first put in operation. However, it is to be hoped that either the present plan can be put on such a basis that it will approximate what was expected of it, or, that the Corporation will consider the matter again and evolve a scheme for Memorial which will be satisfactory both to the boarder and to the finances of the Association. Perhaps an entirely new proposition would...
...first of a series of six lectures by Rev. Otis Cary, D.D., missionary of the American board of commissioners in Kyoto, will be given in Peabody Hall, Phillips Brooks House, this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock. The general topic of the course is "The History of Christianity in Japan"; and the special subject of today's lecture will be "The Jesuit Missions of the Sixteenth Century." These lectures, all of which are open to the public, are being given under the auspices of the faculty of the Andover Theological Seminary...
...Faculty of Andover Theological Seminary announces a course of six lectures on "The History of Christianity in Japan," by the Rev. Otis Cary, D.D., Missionary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in Kyoto. These lectures will be open to the public, and will be given in Peabody Hall, Phillips Brooks House, at 4.30 o'clock on the following dates...