Word: duesing
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The active affiliation with the Harvard Club of men actively connected with college activities will bear fruition in pleasant association with fellow graduates and a continued relationship with the University. From the standpoint of the organization, the increased membership drawn from the undergraduate field will not only provide a more...
"Dues $25 a year . . . raise the dues and have our own club house . . . want golf links that other people can't use . . . tennis courts . . . doctors . . . nobody can get in except . . . have hayfever. . . .
Founded in 1886 by one Henry Bergh* the A. S. P. C. A. fulfills few of its original functions, though its purpose has not changed. In New York City it now collects all the dog taxes; its uniformed agents have police powers and carry 38 Colt revolvers, possess summons books...
Clubs. Student training in the U. S., except for the military services, is entirely a private enterprise.* The Dominion Government has made it semi-public by its aid to the Light Aeroplane Clubs. Twenty-two such clubs are now active. The members contribute dues which pay for an instructor...
Last fortnight bleachers had to be erected in a New York courtroom to accommodate 86 defendants in a poultry-selling racket (TIME, Oct. 21). Last week the New York authorities started action against another, similar game, common to all big cities-"coöperative" selling of loose (unbottled) milk. The...