Word: books
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...clothing collected will be sent to worthy charitable institutions and the magazines will be distributed among hospitals, reading rooms, and charity homes. The text-books will be added to the special text-book loan library in Brooks House. The books used in the larger courses such as Economics 1, History 1, and Government 1 are most needed...
...hoped that the collection will be unusually large this fall, as the requests made to the Phillips Brooks House are very numerous. The clothing will be sent to worthy charitable institutions and the magazines will be distributed among hospitals, reading-rooms and charity homes. The text-book loan library, which has been of great service to many, is supplied with books received in this collection and needs those books used in large courses such as History 1, Government 1, and Economics 1, as the demand for these is the greatest...
...semi-annual collection of clothing, magazines, and text-books will be made under the auspices of Phillips Brooks House next week. A list of collectors for the various dormitories, who will receive all donations, will be printed in Monday's CRIMSON, and they will do their work at stated times during the week. On Saturday wagons will be sent to the dormitories to collect everything that has come into the hands of the collectors. The clothing and magazines will be distributed to worthy charitable institutions, which will see to the proper disposal of them, and the text-books will...
...meeting of the governing board of the Union held last night, a motion was passed to the effect that members be asked to approve the following house rule at the next meeting of the Union: "Any member who takes a book from the library of the Union out of the building shall have his name posted in a prominent place in the club house, and said member be suspended subject to Article IX, Section 1, of the constitution...
...conditions at Harvard are such as to make the adoption of the English system or its modified form now used at Princeton impossible." Still following the more serious pages of the Advocate note must be made of "A Vindication of Warren Hastings"--a review of G. W. Hastings's book by W. G. T. F., who is convinced that Mr. Hastings has made out his case; for the reviewer concludes with an expression of the hope that future editors of the Macaulay essay may profit considerably by Mr. Hastings's monograph...