Word: cuttings
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...fixed charges were extremely high. Whereas under the present arrangement an initial charge is made of something between thirteen and fourteen cents, figured on the report of March 1, the charges last summer were nineteen cents a meal before any food was served. Apparently it is impossible to cut down the help and the running expenses in proportion as the numbers decrease since a certain number of assistants are required regardless of the number of persons served...
...second article Professor George F. Moore discusses from the Harvard standpoint the alliance which will go into effect next year between the and over theological Seminary and Harvard University. An excellent cut of the buildings which the Seminary now occupies in Andover is used to illustrate the article. Arthur P. Stone '93, who coached the Harvard debating team that won from Yale this year, has written a short tribute to the Harvard system of teaching public speaking and debating...
...word about the proposed new council. The undergraduate committee took up its work in all earnestness, because it believed that the students had pledged themselves to make good a promise; and because it wanted to prove that curtailment is not a proper remedy for distraction. It wanted to cut deeper, by dealing with the student activities as a whole, in the creation of a sentiment that can never be legislated into existence. It remains only for the College to accept the plan in the same spirit of co-operation in which it was drawn. We are trying to help...
...Sophomore crew has improved rapidly since vacation. Martin, who replaced Maxwell at stroke, puts more drive into the crew and gets them along more smoothly. The men still rush their slides, however, and cut the finish of the stroke short. Loring, who has been sick, has returned, thus completing the port side, but the starboard side is still unsettled...
...Living Room, next Tuesday evening an opportunity which no other class has ever had. It has been felt for some time that upperclass dinners should be held in Cambridge, and now this opportunity is presented. Moreover, by have the dinner in the union has been possible to cut down the expense somewhat. Realizing this is the last dinner of the entire class, owing to the number of men finishing this spring, and desiring to put on a firm basis for future years the plan of having the dinners in Cambridge, the committee in charge in making especial effort to have...