Word: givenly
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Dates: during 1920-1920
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Here is a real need that should be recognized by the University. In meeting it the college authorities could not do better than to institute an accredited course on contemporary history, similar to those given at Columbia and other universities. The course could be based on weekly lectures by specialists on subjects in their special fields, calling the attention of students to the most reliable sources of information and teaching them how to check up newspaper articles. The student could then be left to choose his own reading, and the course would become a liberal education in itself...
...competition, which lasts until April 16, for bookplate designs for the Senior Album, has been announced. This competition is open to all members of the Senior class, and the winning competitor will be given a free copy of the Album. The drawing must be done in black and white, suitable for engraving. The size of the bookplate is three and one-quarter inches by five inches, and the designs should be proportioned accordingly. All drawings should be handed in to the committee at 4 Holworthy Hall not later than the Friday before vacation, April...
Professor Theodore W. Richards '86, Ph.D. '88, of the Department of Chemistry, will welcome the conference in the Faculty Room of University Hall, Saturday morning after which they will be taken on a sightseeing tour of the University. A buffet luncheon will be given the members of the convention at the Union...
...third and last of a series of concerts of chamber music, given by Mrs. S. H. Coolidge, free of charge to students in the University and Radcliffe College, under the auspices of the Department of Music, will be presented by the Lets Quartet in the John Knowles Paine Concert Hall of the Music Building tomorrow evening at 8.15 o'clock...
...settings of the piece leave much to be desired, but in a repertory or stock company one does not look for the careful scenic consideration given to a prolonged production. The only real discrepancies are to be found in Act III where Mrs. Higgens, an English Lady, the mother of an English son, has an "at home" and receives guests without serving tea. And again, what English lady--or any other-would busily continue to write notes in the presence of her guests...