Word: affords
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...buildings has been somewhat delayed. Work was begun last November, and as the contract called for completion in twenty-three months, the buildings should have been finished a year from this summer. Since, however, they will not be completed until the fail of 1905, and since the School cannot afford to run two establishments, the new buildings will not be entered until the following summer...
...President and Fellows be free to provide from the endowment all grades of instruction in applied science, from the lowest to the highest, and that the instruction provided be kept accessible to pupils who have had no other opportunities of previous education than those which the free public schools afford...
...business principles to this case, the thing to do is to adopt at once the most stringent economy and thus pay the debt and make the improvements at the earliest possible moment. But the Athletic Association was organized to further sport, not as a business enterprise. We can better afford to discharge our debt and make the improvements a little more slowly than to injure any of our sports now by a too rigid economy; and there can be no doubt that the sudden withdrawal of support from the teams in question will injure if not entirely cripple them...
Professor C. H. Moore '89, assistant professor of Greek and Latin, will read the "Prometheus Bound" of Aeschylus this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock in Harvard 1. The reading will afford an opportunity of hearing read an entire Greek play, and although intended primarily for undergraduates will be open to the public...
...trust of caring for an institution which should be regarded as Harvard's most valued possession--a veritable "House of Fellowship." Among the nominees there are men who will work for the Union. They are naturally difficult to distinguish. But every member of the Union can today well afford to weigh them in the balance of his own mind and after the dictates of his own conscience cast his vote for the men who will make the Union what it ought to be--an honor to the University and to its donor. Let personal considerations nowhere arise...