Word: accessibilities
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Unfortunately, provision was not made for these developments in the planning of the Houses, and they have become possible only through large private gifts. As yet all the Houses do not have them, and the Freshmen, the commuters and the graduate students probably will never have access to them. The University should provide a collection of records and piano music for these people. The cost of such a collection is only about five thousand dollars, including piano and victrolas, and it could easily be housed in Widener or some other building in the Yard. It might even be advisable...
...mists of Cambridge in any case; the older ones, which will gravitate to the lots, are now floating about alleys like shiny and disembodied ghosts, and bring revenue to no one but the benignant baboons of the local constabulary. The objection that such an innovation would represent a harmful access of unwonted luxury is absurd: the member of Adams House, who finds an exotic and almost tropical luxuriation of unmentionable facilities off the gold room, to the left of his dining hall, has good reason to wonder why the University declines to make more practical and less expensive arrangements...
...braved the financial and social rigors of general family practice, especially in rural districts, testify to the falsity of this accusation. Vanderbilt Hall, the Medical School's own House Plan, is another proof that the School's curriculum is centered about the student, not the laboratory. Lastly, the free access which the School has to three of the finest hospitals in America, represents not only the appreciation of Boston for the collected wisdom of the school, but also singularly important instruction in everyday medicine...
Continuing the practice followed last year under the "Athletics for All" policy, Freshmen must attend compulsory athletics on three days a week. First year men have free access to the athletic facilities of the University whereas upper classmen may purchase $10 and $5 participation cards...
...bona fides of some municipal bonds held by the National Bank of Topeka. The U. S. District Attorney got busy, requested permission of State Treasurer Tom Boyd to check them against bonds in the State vaults. The Treasurer refused. The District Attorney went to Governor Alfred M. Landon, got access to the vaults. In 40 minutes Federal investigators found $329,000 of forged bonds held as security for deposits of State funds in Kansas banks-found them lying in the vault not more than a yard from the bona fide original bonds of which they were copies, owned...