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...Trustees of the Dudleian Lectures have appointed William Ernest Hocking '01, A.M. '02, Ph.D. '04. Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy, and Civil Polity, to give the Dudleian Lecture for the current academic year. The lecture will be given in Emerson D on Thursday evening. April 29, at 8 o'clock and will be open to the public...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Prof. Hocking Dudleian Lecturer | 4/26/1920 | See Source »

...enemy, killed us in September. You did this after four years of warfare and you are going to do it again." God has given us intelligence and a memory. Let us not listen again to this same advise of people who state that war is over. Before the Civil War Sumner declared that the world had seen its last great war. Now we have this same loose, dangerous international influence springing up against armaments. We do not like war, but must sometimes get ready against...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADDRESS GIVEN BY GENERAL LEONARD WOOD | 4/17/1920 | See Source »

...unless otherwise design: Tuesday, June 1, Contracts, Corporations Wednesday, June 2, Evidence Thursday, June 3, Conflict of Laws Friday, June 4, Property II, Roman Law Saturday, June 5, Equity III, Toris Monday, June 7, Constitutional Law Tuesday, June 8, Agency Wednesday, June 9, Suretyship and Mortgage Thursday, June 10, Civil Procedure, Quasi Contracts, Restriction of Trade. 2.30 P. M., Insurance Friday, June 11, Public Utilities Saturday, June 12, Trusts, Jurisprudence Monday, June 14, Property III, Liability and Criminal Law. Tuesday, June 15, Bills and Notes Wednesday, June 16, Partnership Thursday, June 17, Equity II, International Law Friday, June 18, Property...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANOUNCE SCHEDULE OF LAW SCHOOL FINAL EXAMINATIONS | 4/17/1920 | See Source »

This change, which will take effect next year, will have the result of increasing the number of fields of engineering in which men may specialize during their undergraduate course at the Engineering School from seven to nine. Already the school has programs of study in civil, mechanical, electrical, and sanitary engineering, in mining, metallurgy, and industrial chemistry. Now students will also be given an opportunity to undertake a special course of work in electric communication so as to fit them for the wide opportunities in the telegraph, telephone, and radio-telegraphic industries, and for research and invention in the whole...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ENGINEERING SCHOOL TO ADD SPECIAL COURSES NEXT YEAR | 4/13/1920 | See Source »

Heretofore the sanitary engineering program at the University, as well as in the other universities and technical schools, has followed the civil engineering program except that certain engineering subjects have been omitted and courses have been substituted in qualitative and quantitative chemistry, organic chemistry, bacteriology, water and sewage analysis, and the like. An attempt to cover both the engineering and chemical branches in four years has tended to keep the instruction elementary. Now there will be an opportunity for more advanced instruction through the distinction between city engineers on the one hand, and sanitary chemists on the other...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ENGINEERING SCHOOL TO ADD SPECIAL COURSES NEXT YEAR | 4/13/1920 | See Source »

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