Word: five
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...usually to be had are small. Yet in the ministry and in educational service, the country over, the pay is also inadequate. Of seventeen charitable societies in fourteen of the cities with over 250,000 population, the executive heads were recently paid as follows: seven between $3000 and $5000; five $2400 or $2500; four $1500 or $1800; and one $1200. The payment of more adequate salaries in this field can come only by the gradual education of public opinion to the conviction that good social work, a part of the community's responsibility, can be had only from able service...
...Street went to the Philippines as a United States army surgeon, and after four years of service was appointed chief medical inspector of five provinces near Manila. Part of this work consisted in the medical care of the Igorrotes, a savage tribe in Luzon who cut off the heads of their victims and use them for decorations in their huts. Dr. Street will describe his experiences with this tribe and will show many photographs of them...
...exhibition will be held in the Museum Room of Robinson Hall from January 15 to January 24 inclusive. First, second and third prize cups and five "honorable mention" ribbons will be awarded, and the first selection of prints for the intercollegiate exhibition will be made...
...have permanent headquarters in Boston. The scheme was authorized in a general way when the alumni association adopted a new constitution last Commencement. The details, however, were left to the association's Board of Directors, and this board at a meeting last October voted to have a committee of five take charge of the project. This committee will report to the Board of Directors next Wednesday evening. In this report, which is practically sure of adoption, the committee recommends that the headquarters be established at 50 State street, Boston, in the building used by the Board of Overseers. The committee...
...older schoolmates. He does this for pleasure; but if he finds no fun in it, he does it because he must. He will be punished if he doesn't, either by the scorn of his fellows or the kicks of the upperclassmen. He has his sport for five or six years until he loves it, and until he reaches the university. It has then become habitual. At college he is sought after. The rivalries between the twenty and more colleges in each university are so great upon the river, the cricket and football fields, and elsewhere that every freshman...