Word: prospect
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...good news for Harvard men. The inadequacy of the existing accommodations has long been a vexation to students and instructors who have been obliged to work in the Boylston and Dane laboratories, and has been disagreeably apparent to others by the odors which have emanated from those places. The prospect of relief from these unsavory conditions is welcome...
...University squad has held daily afternoon practice on Soldiers Field since October 21. The prospect for as successful a team as last year's, which defeated Princeton and tied Yale and Columbia, is good. A squad of about 25 men reported, including the following members of last year's team: C. Chadwick '10, G. Fahnestock '10, H. Fish, Jr., '10, S. Galatti '10, F. DeH. Houston '10, F.R. Leland '10, K.C. Lindsey '10, H.L. Whitney...
...Ballantine '04, former president of the CRIMSON, and vice-president of the Prospect Union, will speak on "The Boston 1915 Movement," in the Prospect Union Hall this evening at 8 o'clock...
...regular Sunday afternoon lecture course of the Prospect Union will begin tomorrow afternoon at 3.30 in Prospect Union Hall. Thus far, the following lectures have been arranged: November 14, Professor Eugene Wambaugh '76, of the Law School, subject, "The Injunction in Labor Disputes." November 21, Professor E. F. Gay, Dean of the Graduate School of Business Administration, subject, "The New Industrial Revolution." November 28, Professor I. V. Westengard, General Adviser to the King of Siam, subject, "Modern Siam." December 5, Professor W. Lyman Underwood, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, subject, "Hunting with Canoe and Camera in New Brunswick," illustrated...
...rudiments of English to classes of foreigners of several different nationalities in East Cambridge, East Boston, and Boston, requiring an hour or two one evening a week; ten men to take boys' clubs one evening a week; 25 men to speak in different organizations on the opportunities at the Prospect Union, requiring part of as many evenings as convenient within the next two or three weeks; 50 men to form entertainment troupes of six or eight men each to give an entertainment one evening each month or six weeks; men with talent for instrumental and vocal music, reading, gymnastics...