Word: use
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...movement to set up a monument and tablet appropriately inscribed to mark the site of the old Harvard boathouse, which was in constant use from 1869 until the opening of the present Newell boathouse, has been set in motion under the direction of C. A. Coolidge '81. Mr. Coolidge is making the design and had agreed to direct the work...
...Cambridge for the first time, and to this end, a Bureau of Information is operated by undergraduate and graduate volunteers in the Parlors of the House during the week preceding and a few days after the opening of college. An average of about four hundred men a day make use of this Bureau and find those in charge not only willing to answer questions but to advise them in any problem they may have. Perhaps the greatest service of this Bureau is the information which it gives on lodging places about Cambridge. It is estimated that about two thousand...
These are the more specific details of the work of the Association but its services are not limited to these alone. Up to January first the House has been used for seventy-three meetings other than those mentioned above at which 4284 people have been present. Altogether the total number who have used the House for meetings is 7823. A considerable number of men use the library and pariors of the House every day for quiet reading and writing. It is especially helpful to those men who live at home and have no place to make their headquarters during...
Although the new Harvard baseball cage, designed to be one of the most completely equipped and modern in the country, has been under construction since last October, it will hardly be finished in time for the use of the Crimson ball tossers this spring. This means that the Harvard squad will be forced to endure another season of the indoor work inside the old edifice...
...very different. Upon a careful, fresh reading of this section of the State's Constitution, no fair mind can deny that the councillor has been at least well justified in raising this issue. The language of the amendment is surprisingly inclusive, especially in its words restricting even the use of public property by any school or institution not wholly under public control. In this case, of course, the trustees of the Boston Public Library have not voted to give away one cent's worth of the city's property. They have merely agreed to make the Harvard Business Library...