Word: reed
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...mighty effort was made by Senators Reed and Walsh, supporters of the general manufacturers' excise tax, to insert it into the tax program. Again it failed, out by only one vote...
...Nike, Sec. A4, A9 New Lect. Hall Mr. Haines, Sec. A1, A10 New Lect. Hall Dr. Hindmarsh, B2, B5 Memorial Hall Mr. Maddox, Sec. B7 Memorial Hall Mr. Marshall, Sec. A6 Memorial Hall Mr. Michelmore, Sec. A11 Memorial Hall Mr. Redford, Sec. A2, A5, A12 Memorial Hall Mr. Reed, Sec. A13 Harvard 6 Mr. Shepard, Sec. B1, B4, B8 Memorial Hall Dr. Wild, Sec. B3 Harvard 6 Greek G Dr. Cary, Sec. 2 Sever 31 Greek 8 Sever 29 History 11 Geol. Lect. Rm. History 67 Harvard 2 Japanese 3 Widener C Mathematics AV Dr. Currier, Sec. 1 Harvard...
Honors for Quakers. Swarthmore's aims under President Aydelotte were the same as those of the other pioneers in liberalized college training-Harvard, Princeton, Reed College, Smith. Swarthmore's method was the Honors Course, which is now used by some 80 institutions. Half the Swarthmore juniors and seniors take honors, devoting their full time to reading in any one of ten fields of correlated subjects. They are free from class attendance and examinations, meeting twice a week in small seminars (with tea). At the end they are graduated with honors, high honors or highest honors. And honors...
...Nike, Sec, A4, A9 New Lect. Hall Mr. Haines, Sec. Al, A10 New Lect. Hall Dr. Hindmarsh, B2, B5 Memorial Hall Mr. Maddox, Sec. B7 Memorial Hall Mr. Marshall, Sec A6 Memorial Hall Mr. Michelmore, Sec, A11 Memorial Hall Mr. Redford, Sec. A2, A5, A12 Memorial Hall Mr. Reed, Sec. A13 Harvard 6 Mr. Shepard, Sec. B1, B4, B8 Memorial Hall Dr. Wild, Sec. B3 Harvard 6 Greek G Dr. Cary, Sec. 2 Sever 31 Greek 8 Sever 29 History 11 Geol, Lect. Rm. History 67 Harvard 2 Japanese 3 Widener C Mathematics Av Dr. Currier, Sec. 1 Harvard...
...Mitchell made money for his wife. Whenever he bought a good stock, joined a pool or participated in a promising syndicate, he would cut her in. Only once did she lose. Often she was member of a big underwriting syndicate headed by such firms as Kuhn, Loeb or Dillon, Reed. Sometimes he did not even trouble to notify his wife until he mailed a check for her share of the profits. When he did, it was always with a formal letter starting "Dear Elizabeth," and filled with the cool, redundant clichés of the market place and signed, "Very...