Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...technical and cultural groups. The technical beginning courses are recommended for specialists in science, while the cultural are primarily for the purpose of giving the student "a point of view and of bringing out the educational and cultural value of chemistry (and physics) as a science." (Antioch Bulletin) The Antioch program departs from that of the Committee, however, in that laboratory work is still required in these courses. Antioch persists in believing that laboratory work presents the study of science more vividly and with more reality than study from books. Louis Harap. prov...
Professor R. B. Perry of Harvard, commenting editorially in the current number of the Alumni Bulletin on this first Congress of International Philosophers ever held in the United States, says...
...League. Original plans were to keep this league a secret one and work under cover. But second thought has decided its originators to make public the aims. The league will keep "its members posted on all matters in defense of the faith" by means of a monthly bulletin. Detailed plans are out by which fundamentalist laymen may be elected as commissioners to the forthcoming session of the Presbyterian General Assembly. D. Webster Wylie is President of the League, with offices at No. 25 Broad St., Manhattan...
...current number of the Alumni Bulletin, Eidon Griffin '16 suggests that the prestige of this degree could be restored by reserving it for those who wish to secure a command of their subject for intellectual rather than professional reasons. In order to enhance its distinction, he would require two years of graduate residence instead of the single one now prescribed. The work of these two years would be cultural rather than technical. The aspirant for this degree, though left more to his own resources than he had been in his undergraduate career, would still have access to lectures...
...Harvard man living in an extremely non-Harvard community," Moris Duane '23 writes out of his heart to thank the Alumni Bulletin for its recent tabulation of the accomplishments of University graduates in politics. When now "some unmannerly person" tells him that "It certainly was lucky for Harvard that William didn't play," he "can come right back with some light persiflage ending with the telling argument that Harvard has 26 members of Congress and three Supreme Court justices." His most distressing converational problem, he implies, has thus been solved...