Word: may
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...however, as is earnestly hoped, some revision downward may be made in the minimum board charge, there will be ample opportunity for the existence of clubs which serve one meal a day. Such organizations have a successful prototype in the Metropolitan lunch clubs, and would perform a valuable service in bringing men of different Houses together several times a week. A revision of the club system in this direction would retain most of the real advantages of the present system and do away with the isolated clique tendency which finds its fullest and worst development in so many other American...
...third alternative offering a considerable reduction in the eating requirements of the two Houses, and a five day extension of time in which prospective members may apply for the Houses was announced yesterday at University Hall as the result of student protest over the conditions originally set forth. (CRIMSON, November 26). Upon the advice of the Student Council Committee on the House Plan and Junior members of the Council, a third rate of $7.50 for any 10 meals a week has been established...
...athletic directors, track coaches, and track managers of the six major Boston universities will assemble at the Boston Harvard Club next Thursday in order to formulate tentative plans for the first annual Greater Boston Intercollegiate Track and Field Meet which is to be held in the Harvard Stadium on May...
...preceding list of nominees for Senior Class officers was announced last night by J. H. Ward '30, after a meeting of the Nominating Committee. Additional nominations may be added by petitions which must be sent in no later than Tuesday with at least 25 signatures. From the complete list of candidates will be chosen the men to fill the positions of Class Secretary, the Class Committee, the Class Day Committee, and the Class Album Committee...
There is a serious deficiency in the administration of books reserved on the open shelves in the Main Reading Room of Widener Library. These books may be taken out Saturday evening and not returned until Monday morning. Such an arrangement is quite admirable from the standpoint of abstract liberality, but is necessarily harmful in frequent instances where examinations are held early in the week, and one student has control for two days of several books important in the course. Probably this situation arises rather from the neglect of the individual instructors than from inefficiency in the Reading Room itself...