Word: fined
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...special early final examinations this afternoon will be given at 1 instead of 1.30 o'clock in order to allow students taking them to get to the R. O. T. C. exercise on time. Regular finals will begin tomorrow with 11 tests. The Fine Arts 1d special final will be held in the Fogg Lecture Room instead of Harvard 5, as previously announced. The complete schedule follows...
Fourteen special early final examinations will be given today and nine tomorrow. Fine Arts 3a and History 30b have been added to the list for tomorrow afternoon when the tests will be given at 1 instead of 1.30 o'clock in order to permit men in the R.O.T.C. to get to the exercise at Fresh Pond on time. The schedule follows...
...Fine Arts...
Possible abuses in the operation of the act have been carefully and wisely safeguarded. The grasping employer cannot hold the laborer to his ill-paid job by threat of imprisonment or fine if the latter ceases work. Persons temporarily unemployed by reason of differences with employers, as the law phrases it, are not included in its provisions. The law-makers, however, have not exempted the so-called "idle rich." The receipt of income from property or other source is not considered the equivalent of "gainful employment." Students are the only other class of citizens excluded from the law's operation...
...West Virginia the enforcement of the Compulsory Labor Law has been singularly successful since its passage a year ago. As a part of his punishment the convicted loafer must work upon the roads or other public works. A larger fine and longer imprisonment for delinquents are provided in the Maryland act. In their essentials, however, the laws of the three states agree...