Word: post
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...University property but visited by most students are the Post Office in Brattle Square, Brattle Hall--auditorium next to the Post office, the CRIMSON, Lampoon, and Advocate on Plympton Street--undergraduates publications, and somewhere North and West out Garden Street was Christ Church, the commander and Continental Hotels, and Radcliffe--women's university...
...School of Public Administration opened last March with exploratory conferences between the Faculty and government officials. These conferences will continue during the coming academic year in Hunt Hall in the College Yard, and the school will open to students in the fall of 1938. It will operate on a "post-professional" basis and will be limited at first to the advanced training of men already in the government service...
...impossible for a Sophomore to break into the starting backfield, even such an all-around athlete as Torbert McDonald who did most of the ball-lugging last year. There is, however, the possibility that cliff Wilson will be shifted from a bucking back with Chief Boston to a line post, and in that case there will be an opening for someone to spell Boston...
...Export has no U. S. competitors for it. Hence it is in a better position than many other U. S. lines, made $643.000 last year with the aid of a Government subsidy of $1,479,000. Said Lawyer Kenneth Gardner who pleaded for the new airline before the House Post Office Committee: "Our line feels that air service will supplement steamship service routes and make it possible to discontinue the construction of large, expensive boats. The practice of the future will be to construct combination passenger and freight boats, but to carry by airplane first-class mail, express matter...
...historic letter was published in 1919, suggesting that Britons voluntarily contribute 20% of their capital wealth to the Government to help it out of its post-War hole. The letter was signed F. S. T. but few Britons figured out that the author was the then Financial Secretary to the Treasury, Stanley Baldwin, more recently Prime Minister, today a venerable, bumbling peer...