Word: callings
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...management regret that they have found it impossible to fill all the applications from students for seats. They would call attention to the fact that no seat will be reserved after 7.55 o'clock, when the doors will be thrown open to the public. No seats in the balcony over the stage have been assigned...
Prince Henry of Prussia will become the guest of the University at 1 o'clock today. At that hour the Honorable Francis C. Lowell and Major Henry L. Higginson, in behalf of the Corporation, will call upon him at Hotel Somerset to escort him to Cambridge. Shortly after 1 o'clock, the procession of carriages, led by a battalion of state troops, will leave for Cambridge and will arrive at Memorial Hall at 1.30 o'clock. The route to the University will be way of Massachusetts avenue to the City Hall, where a short stop will be made to enable...
...Economics should show a knowledge of the leading facts and principles of political economy. In addition to the study of principles, a fair knowledge of elementary banking operations and of the banking and monetary history of the United States since 1860 will be required. The examinations in Government will call both for the application of constitutional and political principles to concrete cases and for proof of original thought...
...clock on Thursday, March 6, Prince Henry of Prussia becomes the guest of the University; and the Honorable Francis C. Lowell and Major Henry L. Higginson, on the part of the Corporation, will call upon him at the Hotel Somerset to escort him to Cambridge. It is expected that the procession of carriages, led by a battalion of cavalry of state troops, will reach Memorial Hall at 1.30. The route will be as follows: Hotel Somerset, along Massachusetts avenue, to the Cambridge City Hall, where a short stop will be made, in order to enable the Mayor of Cambridge...
...parkway was built a strip of land 35 feet wide would have to be taken from the Association and that the loss of this land would destroy its chapel and interfere with the convent school and the future plans of the Association. They also claimed that there was no call for the parkway on the part of the public and that it would be unjust to take the necessary land...