Word: bond
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Aside from a batch of bills for professional services, on which he could not collect a penny, John Doctor's assets were meagre-$400 cash in the bank, one $100 Liberty bond, a second-hand automobile worth $200, a $300 lot. Total: $1,000. If ever a man was insolvent, it was John Doctor...
...some future time, but there is a growing feeling of genuine pride and interest in the House, not a feeling that will break down the social barriers that are bound to exist in any cross-section of a social institution, but one which is gradually creating a common bond of working fellowship. From the first the House has been marked for its informality, and this spirit still continues, not only in the relations between the Master, Tutors, and students but among the latter themselves. Except for the weekly meeting of the Tutors for lunch on Wednesday, there is no special...
...Hartwell '34 (E) won by default; Frederick Fraley '33 (E) won by default; W. D. Bond '34 (E) won by default; H. S. Whiteside '34 (E) defeated W. A. Tucker '35 (W), 3-1; G. C. Strecter '34 (E) won by default...
...printing of irredeemable scrip by the government, for the very simple reason that more money must be put into circulation or the United States is headed for a thorough-going collapse. Bank assets were frozen solid even before the recent official blizzard. The bottom dropped out of the bond market last week. Security exchanges would have caved in completely if they had been left open. Everywhere it is evident that the country faces the issue of either drifting to respectable suicide muttering "sound money forever," or by moderate inflation, putting enough oil in the economic system...
...advisable, therefore, that an organization of Harvard Square business men meet with the Student Council or a committee thereof, and arrange that a system of credit be extended to the students of the University. Since the bursar's card is evidence of the deposit of a five hundred dollar bond at Lehman Hall, there should be no serious objections to Harvard Square merchants extending at least a partial credit to students presenting their bursar's cards. Such a system being effected, business on the Square might proceed unhampered, and students would be relieved of the inconvenience brought upon them...