Word: set
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...School has already set such a date. It will conduct a second session, beginning February 3, 1919 and running up to and including August 30, 1919. This session will include the same number of lectures as the ordinary session, will be conducted by the regular teaching staff and will give in all respects the same grade and quality of instruction and substantially the same opportunities as the ordinary session. Lectures in this special session will commence on Monday, February 3, 1919, and no student will be permitted to register after February...
...house will be in charge of Mrs. C. B. Gulick, who has so effciently managed the Radio Canteen since its establishment. For the purpose of a canteen the large room which was formerly utilized by the Speakers' Club as a restaurant will be used. A smailer room has been set aside for the use of a hostess; where men can come to arrange for the numerous social appointments which are made for the military and naval men on their free evenings. The former lounging room of the club will be turned into a reading and writing room...
...flat, with no stone on top of another--unless perchance the under stone may sometimes be above. And in those towns, in shells of houses, windows and often whole walls missing, roofs gone or rent and torn, the civilians were coming back. I saw stores being reopened, houses being set up, debris cleared away. I saw a meat market starting again, the people passing in and out through a hole in the wall, the whole corner of the building having been sheared off. I saw a clothing store again in operation--in what appeared to be a booth, the whole...
...seven soldiers' welfare organizations which are represented in the United War 'Workers' drive have set $170,500,000 as the minimum amount to be obtained during the week of November...
...opportunity to prove their fitness in a new kind of work. As a consequence of this heterogeneous attitude, the grades heretofore sent to the Office in November and April have been notoriously unreliable as evidence of the ability of the average student to apply himself to the tasks set before him. This year, however, the case is entirely different; the slogan of "business as usual" will prove as disastrous if applied to College studies as when used in respect to war-time activity in the commercial world...