Word: sequel
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Provincial England--Manufacturing and Industrial England: The England that has been least affected by Manufacturing and Industry: The England of the Leisure Classes: Some Remarks on the larger Cities of Provincial England," in Emerson J, this afternoon at 3.30 o'clock. This talk, which is given as a sequel to a lecture which Mr. Porritt delivered last Monday on "How to see English History in the Making and English Institutions at Work," is given especially for those intending to go to England next summer, but all members of the University are cordially invited...
...articles. The editorial, on the importance and position of the undergraduate paper, is thoughtfully optimistic in tone, and concludes with dignified reference to the incoming board. "A Novel Experience," by T. Ybarra '05, shows how proper treatment can make a "then-he-woke-up" story entertaining; as does "The Sequel," which in part burlesques "Rupert of Hentzau." A pleasant mixture of English setting and American humor is "My Diary," by J. Hinckley '06. "The Joy of Living," by G. W. D. Gribble Sp., is an interesting and careful study of too often seen characters, who curiously reveal themselves and learn...
...Carroll D. Wright spoke last night on "The Course of Real Wages in the last Half-Century," a sequel to his lecture of the night before on the course of money wages during the same period. In the latter lecture he had shown the great rise in the wages of labor and in his discourse last night he showed that the effects of this rise had been accentuated by the contemporaneous decrease in prices...
...Aldrich Report of 1891 in the United States Senate and its sequel, the Report of the United States Bureau of Labor, are the only examples in the United States of the use of index numbers. In the former, which follows the trend of prices from 1841 to 1891, the standard is the average price of the year 1860. The sequel to the Aldrich Report, "Bulletin 27" adopts as its basis the prices of 1890-91. But despite the lack of uniformily in construction, all of these tables show approximately the same trend of prices...