Word: mr
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Beginning next Wednesday, Mr. J. L. Danguy, coach of the University Fencing Team, will be in the fencing room at the Hemenway Gymnasium from 1.45 to 3.45 o'clock on Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons, to give fencing instruction to any men who want it. This instruction will be given especially for beginners. Beside these hours, Mr. Danguy will act as regular coach to the team in the practice period from 4 to 6 o'clock on the same afternoons...
...membership is one dollar, which includes the initiation fee and the first four months' dues. Meetings are held on the first and third Friday evenings of each month at the City Building, Central Square. Those wishing to join the post should enroll at the above address or communicate with Mr. McLaughlin at the Board of Trade Building, Central Square...
...Affiliation with the American Federation of Labor is the right of any red-blooded American citizen." This statement coming, as it does, from one of our instructors and a specialist on such matters, is worthy of the serious attention of all members of the University. Is Mr. Laski sure this statement applies to everyone? Or does it exclude such people as soldiers and sailors, and other employees of the executive branch of government...
...believe, however, that Mr. Laski holds no such extreme view, and that his regard for what he considers the ill-treatment of the Boston police caused him to say what he did. He is not so much in sympathy with the strikers as he is against the uncompromising attitude of Commissioner Curtis. No matter how far in the wrong the latter may have been, whole-hearted sympathy with the striking policemen cannot be. The argument used so much by their attorneys that they did not strike until assured the city was safeguarded does not hold. If they had known this...
...theatrical season in any city, is the appearance of that droll comedian, William Hodge; especially is this the case when he appears in a new play. One of these worth-while occasions will occur locally at the Wilbur Theatre, Boston, next Monday, Columbus Day, Oct. 13, when Mr. Lee Shubert will present William Hodge in his brand-new play, "The Guest of Honor." It is a comedy romance of New York life in three acts. So consistently successful have been the several plays in which Mr. Hodge has appeared in since his phenomenal success in "The Man From Home," that...