Word: givenly
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Dates: during 1920-1920
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Arrangements have been completed at Notman's by the 1920 Photographic Committee for the taking of individual photographs for the Senior Album. Work on the photographing will begin immediately and each Senior will be given a sitting and one free picture for the Album...
Members of the Union are invited to attend the lecture to be given in the Living Room at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening by Granville Barker, the noted English dramatist, theatrical manager, and producer. Professor G. P. Baker will introduce the speaker, whose subject will be "Experiences in Producing Here and in England and the Present Possibilities of the Theatre." Tomorrow at 1 o'clock Mr. Barker will be entertained by the Signet Society at a luncheon to be given in his honor...
...third series of services for school and college men and women will be held in the Cathedral of St. Paul on Sunday, January 18, at 4 o'clock. These services are given monthly under the auspices of the St. Paul's Society of the University. The preacher for the January service will be the Very Reverend Edmund S. Rousmaniere '83, Dean of the Cathedral. Dr. Rousmaniere is well-known in New England for his interest in students and student problems...
...visual minds learns by seeing; and the motor minds learns by doing. The present system of education completely overlooks the third type and gives only half a chance to the second. The man who is skilfull with his hands--the mechanic, the painter, or the musician, is not given the same opportunity for development in an ordinary school that the pure student receives. Although Dr. Abbott recognizes that some men master languages more easily than mathematics, and therefore recommends early specialization, he does not provide for the man whose mind is not adapted to book-learning...
What is best in our civilization? Our scientific knowledge surpasses that of other nations; let us share it with them and lift them out of ignorance and ill-health into fuller and freer lives. The story of the men and women who have given, not their money, but their lives, to the task of founding schools and curing the sick in foreign lands was repeated with new fascination. Dozens of doctors, teachers, and agricultural workers came to inspire with their presence the new generation of collegians. But the best thing in our civilization, said the leaders of the convention...