Word: months
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...National Bank agrees to pay the student $50 a month for the first twelve months in its employ, with the opportunity of a permanent position at the end of that time. The National Bank further agrees to pay a sum not exceeding $150 for railroad fare to and from the university. This arrangement applies to both the Business School and the undergraduate body...
This incorporation is the first step in the new policy which will be followed by the 1917 board of editors, whose work will not begin till the April issue. After May 1 the paper will be issued twice a month, appearing on the first and the fifteenth...
...field, its pre-eminence among its colleagues has, in times past, not always been maintained. Recently, however, the paper has undergone a thorough reorganization. The new plan to incoporate the magazine is almost certain to place it on a sound working foundation, and the appearance of two issues a month, beginning in May, will pave the way for publishing events of greater current interest. The usefulness and influence of the Illustrated ought to be considerably increased...
...following books have been added to the library of the Union during the month of February: Lyman Abbott, "Reminiscences"; Mildred Aldrich, "A Hilltop on the Marne"; M. Anesaki, "Buddhist Art"; Arnold Bennett, "These Twain"; John Jay Chapman, "Greek Genius," and "Memories and Milestones"; Winston Churchill, "A Far Country"; Frank Danby, "Nelson's Legacy"; M. Lucien Descaver, "The Colour of Paris"; Arthur Elson, "The Book of Musical Knowledge"; St. John G. Ervine, "Eight O'clock"; A. D. Ficke, "The Man on the Hilltop"; Carl R. Fish, "American Diplomacy"; Richard Le Gallienne, "Vanishing Roads"; John Galsworthy, "The Freelands"; N. V. Gogol, "Dead...
...February number of the Monthly does not loss in interest though it presents a surprising contrast to the "Pagan" issue of last month. The figures and sentiments of antiquity no longer flit through its pages; they are replaced by comparatively modern and sordid actualities; like the U. S. Foreign Policy, the "Movie" and the Theatre and the Harvard Regiment. The prevailing note of the number is non-fictional; indeed, the only serious criticism that can be brought against the Monthly of 1916 is the absence of anything particularly creative in the realm of the short story...