Word: items
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Below is printed the financial report of the class of 1913 for the Junior year. The class dues collected amounted to a little over $400, and the total expenditures for class smokers to $452.95. This latter item includes all expenses connected with the smokers, such as sums paid for music, refreshments, entertainments, etc. RECEIPTS. Balance from 1910-11, $2.53 Class Dues, 400.80 Balance from Junior Dance, 91.57 Balance from sale of Class Buttons, 30.25 Incidentals, 11.50 $536.65 EXPENSES. Class Smokers, $452.95 Student Council Dues, $20.00 Printing, 25.00 Refund from Junior Dance, 5.00 Expenses Senior Election, 16.50 Incidentals, 8.90 $528.35 Total...
...last Wednesday's issue of the CRIMSON there appeared an article which, I believe, should appeal very strongly to a great number of Harvard students. I refer to the news item concerning the formation of an Undergraduates' Economics Society. Such an organization should prove of incalculable benefit to the students enrolled in the undergraduate courses. Such an organization will fill a great need here at Harvard. Every day there are questions that come up in the lecture or conference room that, for lack of time, cannot be taken up at sufficient length. Every day events of economic importance are taking...
...every Freshman that he not only ought not but could not keep house without a Union membership. The habit was formed in cubdom, and persisted. This zeal, it is understood, has been abated, with the above result. Yet the plan of admitting the Union membership fee as an item on the term bill--which means that the bill comes not out of my allowance but out of father's cheek--has not prevented the decrease, and this with a synchronous increase in the university enrollment. If, therefore, the Union stands chiefly for an experiment in Harvard democracy it has been...
...coliseum is the main item in an extensive program for improving athletic facilities at New Haven. One hundred acres of land have already been acquired, at a cost of $140,000, opposite the present field, and the work of grading has commenced. An adequate club house will eventually be erected on a part of it. The coliseum, however, is first in order, and it is hoped that it will be completed by next fall...
...Cruikshank and Thomas Rowlandson. The Rowlandson water color drawings, about 150 in number, constitute perhaps the finest series of nineteenth century humorous drawings in any private library. Of drawings by the two Cruikshanks there are some 250, a considerable portion of these being dramatic portraits. The most interesting Cruikshank item is a sketch for "Oliver Twist," the drawing on which Cruikshank based the claim that it was he who had given Dickens the suggestions which he had elaborated in his novel...