Word: transaction
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Union on Monday, May 10, at 7 o'clock for the purpose of forming a wrestling association. The meeting will be conducted by Mr. Garcelon. A petition will be drawn up and sent to the Athletic Committee asking that the association be sanctioned, allowed to elect officers and transact such business as may be thought advisable and that it be granted permission to have outside competition with other colleges. The principal object of this association s to arouse interest in wrestling and to lessen the cost of wrestling lessons. The following men have signified their interest in wrestling...
...Garcelon L.'95 will give a dinner to the captains, managers and assistant managers of all the teams at the Varsity Club this evening at 7 o'clock. The object of the dinner is to give the managers information as to the best way to transact the business of the teams, and to bring about more uniformity in their methods. The Athletic Committee, Coaches Haughton '99, Pieper '03, and Winsor '02, and all graduate managers living at or near Cambridge have been invited to attend...
...Shipherd '08 was elected corresponding secretary, and A.B. Kuttner '08 secretary-treasurer. The above, with Dr. H.W. Morse, president of the Club, were appointed a committee empowered to transact all business. The next meeting will be held early in January...
...absent for the greater part of his term; on his departure a successor was appointed, not elected; at the meetings of the committee some members almost made it a business to stay away, or if present took no active part in the affairs they were elected to transact. The Membership Committee this year was lax in performing the small amount of business its duties called for: five men not members of the Union were nominated for officers; the list of nominees was representative of a particular class of men and not of the University; the number of men required...
...been urged that the class will have very little business to transact, and therefore will have no need of going to all the trouble necessary for the establishment of a constitution which will often act as a hindrance rather than as a benefit. But how a reasonable constitution, adopted by the class, and always subject to amendment, can act as a restraint upon anything but irresponsibility and ineffectiveness, is somewhat difficult to perceive...