Word: shared
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...present war the Harvard Medical School is doing its share in relief work. When England called for medical aid from this country a year ago, there was a response from many quarters, including Columbia, Johns Hopkins, and Harvard. But of the three universities Harvard alone sent a unit to the European hospitals, where it worked efficiently for three months, and was succeeded by another unit. Then England asked Harvard to send a unit to take charge of a base hospital of one thousand beds, and accordingly thirty doctors and seventy nurses are now active in that base hospital...
...months the Class Photograph Committee, the Class Day Committee, the Secretary and the Treasurer have been begging for the co-operation of the class. Two of these committees have made very rigid contracts with various firms, and unless the class does its share to help the committee, we are liable to a loss of $200. It will take but a little time for you to call up Notman for an appointment, to return the proof, drop into the Co-operative to be measured for a cap and gown, and sit down and make out your class life. Next Saturday, March...
...paid out through Technology for 'the payment of salaries, the maintenance of scholarships, the care of grounds, and the erection and maintenance of buildings and equipment,' etc., but all appropriations must be approved by the institution which supplies the funds, and buildings may be erected only from the share of the funds supplied by the Institute. The President of Technology is to be the executive head of all of the work, and he must report to both institutions. The Faculty of Technology will be enlarged by the addition of certain members of the instructing staff of Harvard and this...
Best of all, however, would be the effect upon two larger problems. The University has long been obliged to share with all Cambridge the pool of the Y. M. C. A., but hundreds of other students have practically done no swimming at all because of the lack of good opportunity. Almost every other university of any size has a pool; and none would think of giving it up. At Yale four hundred men swim every day. The lack of a pool at Harvard is far from a cause for pride...
...Harvard Rowing" is the subject of a treatise by Francis Peabody '80, who seems to dive to the very bottom of the turbulent sea of crew-coaching troubles. He comes up smiling with this pearl: "We may reasonably expect that Harvard will, under these new coaches, win her fair share of the races with Yale, a much larger portion than heretofore of the races with Cornell, and also win from such other colleges as she may row against in the future." Bon voyage to the crews of Coach Herrick...