Word: discussable
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Friday, June 6, the regular business session of the Associated Harvard Clubs will be held to discuss the reports of officers and committees, to elect officers, and to select the place of the next meeting. As part of the Friday meeting it is expected that Professor H. E. Clifford, acting Dean of the Engineering School, will speak on the work of this department of the University. Assistant Professor K. B. Murdock '16 will speak on recent developments of the House Plan, while J. F. Dwinell '02 will make a report on the Harvard Employment Service. In the evening the annual...
...when public-school music was limited to daily sing-song renderings of a morning hymn, tremendous strides have been taken in this branch of education. Now even remote little schools have their special music teachers, their glee clubs, orchestras, bands, unusual opportunities to hear concerts by professionals. To discuss these comparatively recent developments and to compare achievements, there met last week in Chicago some 7,400 music supervisors for the Second Biennial National Conference. Superintendent William. J. Bogan of the Chicago Public Schools spoke. So did Conference President Mabelle Glenn, music supervisor in Kansas City, Mo., and Vice President George...
...last of the series of popular lectures on engineering will be given at 4.30 o'clock today in .110 Pierce Hall, when Professor D. H. McLaughlin '15 will discuss "Mining Ore Bodies by Caving Methods...
President Lowell, who appears before first year classes as an adviser annually in April, will give information as to the best methods of choosing work for the final three years in college. Professor Baxter will explain the methods used in the tutorial system, while Mr. Leighton will discuss the courses of the Sophomore year...
...ordered them to stop using "fake testimonials and specious argument that all can keep slender by smoking that brand of cigarettes." The Camel advertisement also objected to the inference that the cigaret industry used "rank tobaccos" with harmful irritants, saying, in effect, that while George Washington Hill could legitimately discuss the rank tobacco in Luckies and its improvement by toasting, he should not attribute such rankness to the industry as a whole. Concerning toasting itself, the Camel copy said...