Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...easy to see how valuable a memorial the Record can be, with its excerpts from the poets, its passages from textbooks, and its general information. Recently a Missouri Congressman, vitally interested in dogs, wished the department of agriculture to issue a bulletin on them. To prove the desirability of his request, by unanimous consent he "extended" his remarks in the Record, and filled four pages with an all-comprehensive dissertation on canines from Noah's time to this. It begins with the Darwinian theory, includes mention of the drawings on the tombs of the Egyptian Kings, and contains almost every...
...alone in its glory. The last minute filibuster must have filled page after page with brilliant irrelevance. Instead of a mere handbook for English 10, the Record might well be adopted as a general textbook and reference compendium for all academic courses. It serves for a poultry bulletin as well as for an Automobile Show pamphlet. Careful perusal may prove it to be, after all, the best thing the Sixty-Seventh Congress has accomplished...
...monthly bulletin issued by the Union yesterday it was announced that the moving picture entertainment which had previously been planned for Thursday, January 18, has been transferred to the preceding evening, Wednesday, January 17. The hour at which the pictures will be shown, 7.30 o'clock, remains the same...
...Ticket Committee for four years after the present rules went into effect; Sheridan Logan; 23, of St. Joseph, Mo., manager of the University crew; Langdon P. Marvin '98, of New York City, President of the Associated Harvard Clubs; J. D. Merrill '89, editor of the Harvard Alumni Bulletin; Major F. W. Moore '93, graduate treasurer of the Harvard Athletic Association; J. W. Prentiss '98, of New York City, permanent treasurer of the Endowment Fund; and H. S. Thompson '99, of Concord, former graduate manager...
...recent correspondent of the Alumni Bulletin makes the rather startling suggestion that Harvard be represented next fall by two Varsity, football teams instead of one, and that while one plays Yale at New Haven the other play Yale (who is also to have two teams of course) in Cambridge, the winner being the college which amasses the largest combined score. In this way all ticket-difficulties would be abolished, and the proportion of players to spectators would be increased...