Word: fees
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...takes on all comers at rheumatic ping pong. The rathskeller held some very popular "punchteas" after the football games and offers vic dancing every evening except Sunday. This glorified Eliot House Grille and the three formal dances held each year have finally convinced many young instructors that the membership fee ($5:00 or $10.00 for the lower brackets of University income) is a good investment...
...from the bourgeois hustle and bustle of the Square, set back in a cluster on Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge's own Fifth Avenue, lie three of the most amazing clubs in the world. Their initiation fee, a mere seventy-five to a hundred and ten dollars, is the only concrete barrier to membership. Their quarters are small but comfortable. Their purpose is neither exactly intellectual nor precisely social; it is to sell clothing...
...morning last week Professor Frederick Burt Farquharson of the University of Washington arrived at the bridge as usual to make motion pictures of its gentle writhing under the wind. Soon after him came 25-year-old college student Winfield Brown, who paid his 10? pedestrian fee and walked across for the thrill. Approaching was a logging truck and an automobile driven by mild, baldish Leonard Coatsworth, reporter on the Tacoma News-Tribune. Mr. Coatsworth stopped to look at the undulations before he paid his toll. They were no worse than usual...
Founded by Glenn Saxon '44 and S. A. Tucker '44, the Club's aims are to supervise all building at Harvard, especially the new library. Membership fee is ten cents, and sister chapters are expected to spring up soon in Wellesley and Radcliffe...
...finishing school, Rosemary (fee: $1,600 a year) is patronized by well-to-do girls of the hardier sort, most of whom go on to Bryn Mawr or Vassar. Among its 1,900 alumnae are Mrs. Charles Seymour, Mrs. Robert A. Taft, Mrs. S. Parker Gilbert, President Katherine Blunt of Connecticut College...