Word: freeing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...planned to give later a concert at the University Club in Boston and another at Chelsea. Some time in June a free concert will be given for the benefit of the College...
...Loud. Of the pictures that are especially attractive are "After the Storm," by W. B. Swift '01, and "Sunset in Gloucester Harbor," by H. W. Eliot '02. Both of these pictures are reproduced in half-tone in the catalogue, which may be obtained free of charge at the exhibit. On the evening of February 26, Mr. Charles T. Carruth, president of the Cambridge Camera Club, will criticise the pictures before the members of the club. The exhibition will continue until Saturday evening, February...
...absent from Cambridge), and it is with this understanding that the special rates are offered. Special arrangements have been made with the class photographer about reproduction, to secure uniformity of style and appearance, and considerable inconvenience will result from failure to sit for the official photographer. These sitings are free, and it is hoped that every member of the class will stand by the committee in its contract. Photograph Committee...
President Eliot, in response to a request from Mr. A. E. Frye L. S. '90, Superintendent of Schools in Cuba, has consented to furnish free tuition in the Summer School, for a large number of native Cuban school teachers. According to reports from Havana, if adequate arrangements can be made, about 1000 teachers will take advantage of this offer. The government will probably furnish army transports for bringing them here, and Mr. Frye hopes it will be possible for them to visit many different cities, through the generosity of the railroads and the municipalities themselves...
...argument that a three or four minute walk is a matter of no moment, and that the few minutes we might spend in the club, if it were in a central location, are of little account beside the afternoons and evenings which are "free to most of us" and which conceivably would be spend in the club, shows nothing but the writer's misconception of the purpose and function of the Harvard Union. The men whose frequent presence in the Harvard Union is necessary to its greatest success are not men who can often afford an entire afternoon or evening...