Word: file
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Only the Meiji would know. Firm in this conviction a spruce file of puzzled Japanese Army officers rode out from Tokyo one dawn last week to a pungent park of pine and camphor trees. They crossed a gurgling brook, entered a spotlessly clean quadrangle and faced with awe the Meiji Shrine, an unpainted wooden building, austere, impressive and, to Japanese, sublime...
...number of students being 631 last year as compared with 828 this year. The reason for this great increase is that a unique method of limiting the course was used last year, but was discontinued this fall. In 1932, men intending to elect this course were obliged to file a card of application giving information regarding general fitness for the course when registering. Although no men were refused admission, it was confirmed at University Hall in 1932 that this system frightened off a large number of men who would otherwise have taken the course. However, the 1933 figure shot above...
...cars have already been tagged of which at least 300 are those of students at Harvard. Police are sent out at 12 o'clock each night solely to tag parking violators. Many owners who received arrests for parking have not appeared at the police station. But this year, a file is kept of all persons receiving parking arrests, and those who do not appear will be mailed a second card, and will ultimately be forced to obey the strong arm of the law. At the first offense, violators will be warned, but the second time they will be sent...
...Study cards of Freshmen must be handed in at University Hall, Room C, before this hour. Provisionally classified students may file their study cards not later than 5.00 P. M. on Tuesday, September...
...first" last week was a stop-order issued by the Federal Trade Commission under the new Securities Act. Last month the Speculative Investment Trust of Fort Worth, Tex. registered a $250,000 issue with the Commission. Its registration papers were found to be inaccurate and incomplete. It failed to file its advertising prospectus-addressed to "Dear Friends & Backers," promising "Big, Quick Profit Winnings," and adorned with a large NRA Blue Eagle. The concern was ordered not to sell any of its stock, under pain of $5,000 fine and five years imprisonment, until it fully complied with...