Word: bulletin
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...schedule printed below is not official. Students will be held responsible for meeting examination appointments in accordance with the official schedule posted on bulletin boards of College buildings. Failure to meet examination appointments will not be excused on the basis of deviation between official and unofficial printed schedules. All students are advised to examine official schedules before the examination period begins. A. C. Hanford...
...schedule printed below is not official. Students will be held responsible for meeting examination appointments in accordance with the official schedule posted on bulletin boards of College buildings. Failure to meet examination appointments will not be excused on the basis if deviation between official unofficial printed schedules. All students are advised to examine official schedules before the examination period begins. THURSDAY, JANUARY 19 (IV) Anthropology 9 Peabody Mus. 22 Anthropology 11 Sever 6 Botany 11 Sever 1 Botany 15 Botanical Mus. 21 Chemistry A Mallinckrodt MB8, MB9 Chemistry 3a Mallinckrodt MB23 Chemistry 21 Coolidge Lab. Classical Philology 43 Sever...
Commenting on these pictures a bulletin of the School of Architecture states: 'Some people regard modernism in architecture as the salvation of that art and some, as its annihilation. All intelligent people are familiar with the appearance of modern buildings reproduced in black and white, in the rotogravure sections and in journals of art and architecture. Mr. Bennett, who is an enthusiast, had the idea that one reason it was not better appreciated was the fact that the public generally ignored the color and therefore had no knowledge of the real appearance of the work. He decided to make extensive...
...Bulletin of the Neurological Institute of New York...
...afternoon last week the city editor of the New York Evening Post called a rewrite man, handed him a slip from the City News ticker. It was a brief bulletin of a fire in a building near Times Square. The rewrite man, Arthur McCullough, knew what to do. He thumbed through a reversed telephone directory (classified by address), called a number listed for the building. That telephone had been disconnected. At random he called another telephone in the same building. A man "with a voice that was both urbane and cheery" answered. In its next edition the Post published...