Word: aprils
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Mount Holyoke College at South Hadley will be the scene on April 12 and 13 of a Model Assembly of the League of Nations in which a majority of New England colleges will participate. This meeting has been arranged on the initiative of students at Amherst, Massachusetts Agricultural College, and Smith, with the cooperation of the League of Nations Association...
...program calls for an informal dance on the evening of Friday, April 12. On the following morning there will be a meeting of the Model Council to discuss the Bolivia-Paraguay question. In the afternoon an Assembly meeting will be held on the subject of disarmament. A formal banquet in the evening will be followed by a feature unprecedented in Model Assemblies--a meeting based on the organization of the International Labor Office at Geneva...
...exhibition in student work in art is being held on the fourth floor of the Fogg Museum and will continue through April 6. The collection consists of some interesting landscapes, still lifes, and portraits, which have been achieved by Harvard students in Fine Arts 2c and 2d and by Radcliffe students in Fine Arts...
...Sunday morning late in January, six men bent upon a secret errand slipped into the empty, silent offices of Cosmopolitan Magazine in Manhattan. Doors were locked, keys turned. Thus barricaded against intrusion, Editor Ray Long of Cosmopolitan sat down with five excited assistants to examine the "dummy" of their April number. The first thing they did was tear out the leading article. It was to be replaced by another article, a mystery article that commanded precedence. Plans were cunningly laid, and when Editor Ray Long entrained for California that night he felt that the secret was left behind...
...secret and enjoined to secrecy at the moment of shipment. Not until three days before the Cosmopolitan reached newsstands was the truth let out. Then, because other magazines were beginning to get publicity by boasting of similar features to come, Editor Long announced that the leading article of the April Cosmopolitan was "On Entering and Leaving the Presidency," by Calvin Coolidge. Thus were the Coolidge record for silence, and the Coolidge respect for the dignity of office, kept unblemished. Thus did Editor Long cash the publicity of his surprise at practically face value. Contrary to early reports, the first instalment...