The Journal of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, Volume 10

Front Cover
Association of Collegiate Alumnae at the University of Chicago Press, 1917 - Women

From inside the book

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 359 - Applicants should at once apply either to the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, DC, or to the secretary of the board of examiners at any place mentioned in the list printed hereon, for application Form 1312.
Page 604 - War appears imminent; and Whereas, Other countries upon engaging in the conflict permitted a serious breakdown of protective labor regulations with the result, as shown by recent official investigations, of early and unmistakable loss of health, output and national effectiveness; and Whereas, Our own experience has already demonstrated that accidents increase with speeding up and the employment of new workers unaccustomed to their tasks, that over-fatigue defeats the object aimed at in lengthening...
Page 649 - President, it was moved and carried that the reading of the minutes of the last meeting be omitted and that they be approved as printed in the volume of Proceedings.
Page 171 - Langdon, who has become curator of the Babylonian section of the museum of the University of Pennsylvania...
Page 516 - It occurred to me that woman, having received from her Creator the same intellectual constitution as man, has the same right as man to intellectual culture and development.
Page 360 - Mass. ; Philadelphia, Pa. ; Atlanta, Ga. ; Cincinnati, Ohio; Chicago, 111.; St. Paul, Minn. ; Seattle, Wash. ; San Francisco, Cal. ; customhouse, New York, NY ; New Orleans, La.; Honolulu, Hawaii; old customhouse, St. Louis Mo. ; Administration Building Balboa Heights, Canal Zone ; or to the chairman of the Porto Rican Civil Service Commission, San Juan, PR...
Page 514 - The Autobiography and Letters of Matthew Vassar EDITED BY ELIZABETH HAZELTON HAIGHT Svo, Cloth, pp.
Page 594 - ... suppose a race of men whose minds, by a paralytic stroke of fate, had suddenly been deadened to every recollection, to whom the whole world was new. Can we imagine a condition of such utter helplessness, confusion, and misery?
Page 428 - Costlgan's paper appears in the supplement to the American Economic Review for March, 1918. Wallace Notestein, of the University of Minnesota, read a paper, at once entertaining and of solid value, on the " Pan-German use of history." At noon of the first day, the members of the American Historical Association and the American Political Science Association came together in a subscription luncheon, at which M. Louis Aubert, of the French High Commission, spoke eloquently of the aid of historians in...

Bibliographic information