Word: hands
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Most students are already familiar with the Harvard Students' Employment Office which finds temporary positions for students during the course of their University work. The purpose of the Appointment Office of the Harvard Alumni Association on the other hand is to place graduates in permanent positions of either a business or technical character; everybody who has been connected with the University in any department is eligible to avail himself of the facilities which the Appointment Office affords. Although the office also helps the older and more experienced graduates, it wishes particularly to talk things over with...
Entertainment, 462.28Miscellaneous, 872.75Rent of Land, 630.00Insurance, 336.05Taxes, 2,983.73Office Service, 1,255.50Office Board, 205.00Library Service, 414.93Library Expenses, 32.15$15,920.11 $15,920.11RESTAURANT DEPARTMENT. Receipts.Dining Rooms, $16,734.65Ladies' Cafe, 246.40Help's Table, 3,833.00Stock on Hand, 850.40Loss, 1,569.63 Expenses.Purchases, $13,477.27Services, 5,535.62Board of Help, 2,190.00Kitchen Fuel, 275.19Gas, 81.31Kitchenware, 198.20Tableware, Linen, 435.59Laundry, 380.58Printing, 74.82Miscellaneous...
...Wireless Club announces that it will handle free of charge, subject to slight delay, relay messages to any part of the United States. This means that any member of the University desiring to send a radiogram should hand his message to the operator who may be found in the clubroom in the basement of the Union any evening from 8 to 12 o'clock. These messages will be relayed to the nearest amateur station and telephoned to their destinations. No messages will be received, however, for towns at any great distance from amateur stations. No responsibility will be taken...
...desirable, two or more men may collaborate. Those having either words or music alone should not hesitate to submit their contributions. All manuscripts should be handed in at Thayer 52, where information will be given as to the style and form desired. Men may hand in as many compositions as they wish...
...professionalized music, bought and sold like any other commodity of luxury or convenience, has been the brand with which we are all familiar. We hear of exorbitant prices paid to the great singers. We know the tremendous cost of maintaining opera, or a symphony orchestra; and on the other hand, we hear about the fortune made by a clever writer of popular songs. Our basis of the value of music is for the most part two-fold: that of the popular brand of music, which we respect according to the amount of money it has made; and that...