Word: end
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...William I. Cole, who has been for many years a resident worker at the South End House in Boston, will speak on "The Appeal of Social Work" at the meeting of the Christian Association in the Parlor of Phillips Brooks House this evening at 7 o'clock. Mr. Cole has rendered valuable service to the Department of Social Ethics in preparing an exhibit illustrating the work of the social settlements of the world. This collection is in the library of the Department in Emerson Hall. All members of the University are invited to attend the meeting...
...baseball teams, and the crew won last year was because they kept everlastingly at their work. The track team must defeat Yale this year to make up for the defeat of last year, and in order to do this every man must stay out for practice until the end, and even if a man feels that he cannot make the team, his work may encourage someone else...
Every student in Harvard College and the Lawrence Scientific School who, at the end of the Christmas or Spring recess, fails to register at the time set for that purpose, may be required to pay to the Bursar a fee of $5 before being permitted to register. Payment of this fee does not preclude action by either of the administrative boards in the cases of students who register late. No student who has been granted an extension at the beginning of the recess is thereby released from his responsibility to his instructors. Absence from Cambridge is no excuse for delay...
Every student in Harvard College and the Lawrence Scientific School who, at the end of the Christmas or Spring recess, fails to register at the time set for that purpose, may be required to pay to the Bursar a fee of $5 before being permitted to register. Payment of this fee does not preclude action by either of the administrative boards in the cases of students who register late. Students in good standing, living at a very considerable distance, who will be granted an extension of time at the beginning of the recess, may learn the exact amount by petitioning...
...actors, the earliest to distinguish himself was H. G. Eisenstadt '12, who played to the life a naive peddler. Hartwell himself was taken by R. M. Middlemass '09, whose acting grew steadily better from beginning to end, a gentle, noble, and at every crisis finely impassioned figure. Miss Gragg in an uneven role gave through the last two acts so sincere a performance that the house broke into applause at her defiance of the Rabbi, and then at the last became physically uncomfortable over her anguish at Hartwell's well-acted deatn. Her appeals, her sobs, her despair, were surprisingly...