Word: taxed
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...train or automobile. The game will start promptly at 2 o'clock. Ticket holders should make every effort to reach the grounds early and thus avoid the inevitable rush of the last half-hour. Sixty-eight thousand tickets have been sold, and the handling of the crowd will tax transportation facilities on railroad and trolley lines to the limit. Traffic of all kinds in the city will of necessity, be slower than usual. The Bowl is a mile and a half from the centre of the city and ticket holders should therefore, allow at least an hour to reach...
...total of sixty-one thousand visitors will tax facilities of the trolley and of the management to the utmost. The New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company estimates that it will take twenty-two trains to carry those coming to the game from New York, and as this will crowd their facilities in the Grand Central Station to the utmost, it is not expected that private parlor cars will be allowed on the day of the game...
...more aggressive and formal policy than hitherto has governed the institution. This of course can be done solely on the ground of service to be rendered, and without the slightest expectation that the institution ever is to ask from the state more financial aid than it now gets, namely, tax exemption. As a matter of principle and conviction any deliberate formal change from the traditional type of privately supported university would be fought vigorously by many Harvard graduates in Massachusetts. With all the pecuniary limitations that this form of support involves it also carries with it elements of strength...
...Department, was appointed a member of the Committee on Taxation four years ago, and with the exception of last year when he was personal adviser of Governor Foss, he has served continually since that time. He proposes the adoption of a system of taxation on personal property, whereby the tax could be levied uniformly and equally and the collection could be made more thorough and systematic. Professor Bullock was also a member of the Committee on the Taxation of Forest Lands which recently proposed a bill for state ownership of forests...
...upon. The membership was accordingly increased to 54 students with Professor Taussig as the first honorary member. Professor B. M., Anderson delivered an informal address in November on "Aspects of Socialism," while Professor Bullock, immediately after the Christmas vacation, gave the society a very comprehensive description of the Income Tax. The society has been gradually collecting a library of economic works until now 125 volumes are available for use by the members...