Word: randolph
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...make calls except by using the pay-phones near the Common Rooms. In the older buildings of Kirkland, Winthrop, and Leverett, the situation, though not ideal, is somewhat better. The pay-phone in each entry provides the convenience of limited use to students who cannot afford a private line. Randolph Hall has a still more convenient arrangement: all suites are provided with telephones, and residents are charged five cents for each outside call...
...ping-pong tournament will be held in Randolph Hall beginning about March 1. Entries will close Saturday, February 27. Each participant is expected to contribute ten cents towards a prize for the winner...
...President Ebenezer Francis Bowditch, of Concord Robert Somers Brookings II, of Alexandria, Virginia Charles King Howard, of Larchmont, New York Randolph Appleton Kidder, of Andover William Charles McCarty, of Arlington Franklin Plummer Whitbeck, of Brouxville, New York William Keblinger Wyant of Atlanta, Georgia...
...latest addition to the length of Harvard's subterranean passages, a tunneled walk connecting Randolph Hall and Westerly Court with the central unit of Adams House, has finally been completed and was opened for use last Saturday. As a result of this final boring, the swimming pool in Westerly may be reached from either Randolph, or from the central unit of the House, where the dining and common rooms are located. At present the construction of the new building of Adams House is rising toward completion on the site of the former Russell Hall...
Heretofore, good though such a levy might be in theory for distributing the cost of Government, it was generally viewed as a political impossibility. The only organized and articulate advocacy of such a levy came from Publisher William Randolph Hearst who sent a large Congressional delegation to study Canada's 4% sales tax. Against a sales tax the ordinary U. S. politician, chiefly interested in people as voters, cries out on the ground that: 1) it would burden the poor man proportionally more than the rich man; 2) it would be costly to collect; 3) no tradition...