Word: boundingly
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...graduating class of the Harvard Dental School will issue this year for the first time a Class Album. The volume will contain class records and photographs of Dean Smith to whom the book is dedicated, President Eliot, and President Lowell. It will be bound in crimson leather and will have the Harvard seal on the cover. The committee in charge of publication are as follows: editor-in-chief, F. T. Hassett; business manager, N. E. Young; editors, T. J. Giblin, A. J. Gallagher, P. R. Manning, and H. F. Tufts...
...graceful acknowledgement by Mayor Barry of Cambridge in his second inaugural address of the services which the University has been able to render to the city will please all Harvard men. The city and the University are bound in an indissoluble partnership which may be of great value to each side. The city in large measure creates the atmosphere in which the University lives: clean streets, pure water, public order, a community living on a high level of education and morality, make conditions to which parents willingly commit their sons. The University is only meeting its fair share...
Passengers arriving at Harvard square station on inward-bound cars may receive from the collector, upon request, as they pass out to the street, green checks for transfer to inward-bound cars taken upon the surface...
Conductors of outward-bound cars reaching Harvard square from Boston, Central, or Kendall square, will issue to passengers, upon request, at the time of payment of fare, checks for admission to Harvard square station for a ride on any outward-bound car, provided that such checks shall not be issued to persons paying fare with transfer checks issued from Scollay square, or Adams, square station, or from any station of the Cambridge subway. "Outward" and "inward-bound" are here used with reference to Boston. Some convenient arrangement for the continuation of certain trips on the surface after covering part...
...undergraduates, the building of a home for the Harvard Club of Boston does not appear in the same light as it does to a graduate. At the same time it is a move of such promise that the CRIMSON cannot help commenting on it. We are all bound together as Harvard men by our every-day life, and it is not until we have left College that we feel the need of an extension of Harvard fellowship into the general life of the community. To us this new club which is to be built near the corner of Commonwealth...