Word: servante
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...report of the Co-operative Society shows a gratifying increase in membership and volume of business. The Co-operative has established itself as an efficient business concern and a "satisfactory servant of Harvard students." It is yearly catering to more men, providing an ever increasing variety of purchases at prices fully as low if not lower, than can be found elsewhere...
There are, however, certain ends towards which the Society has striven with success that can be more or less accurately measured. Year by year it has become more and more the satisfactory servant of Harvard students, as shown by its steadily increasing membership and volume of business. It has assumed all the aspect of a big business without losing effectiveness in its co-operative capacity. It has become as large, as all other college co-operatives together, at the same time serving as their model. And if the new office of Managing Director, filled by a man taken directly from...
...Corporation. Theirs is a labor of love and of honor, a type of what Harvard expects from her sons both for herself and for the community. Dr. Cabot was a distinguished member of the medical profession, a lover of art and science, and a more than loyal servant of the University. His services are now appropriately described by another devoted member of the Corporation, Dr. H. P. Walcott...
...Freiher, E. K. Hackes '14 Dietrich von Vinck, Mr. H. F. Mayer Hofmarshall Graf Dornstedt, E. J. Hubermann '13 Mr. Thomas Forster, G. Priester sC. Mary, his daughter, A. A. Berle '13 Mrs. Hanna Stephenson, H. R. Habicht '13 Wernicke, a steward, R. H. Campbell '16 Lorens, a servant, W. L. Langer '16 Franz, a waiter, P. Bradley '16 An attendant, A. B. Warren...
...death of Dr. Arthur Tracy Cabot Harvard has lost a brilliant son and the community a faithful servant. Throughout his useful career he devoted untiring energy to the service of his profession and yet found time to accept various public duties. His service to the state for the prevention and cure of tuberculosis was remarkable. Although past middle life, he never hesitated when the needs of the Commonwealth called him, and gave up a toilsome and exacting profession to accept a chairmanship of the State Board for Relief and Control of Tuberculosis, which entailed duties, if possible, more toilsome...