Word: covered
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...only $6,000), the Department of Commerce (an increase of $2,018,000, although the total includes an extra $3,500,000 which will be needed for the decennial Census of Agriculture), Department of Justice (an increase of $2,129,760). The appropriation of this Department is extended to cover the entire year whereas budget estimates in previous years were intentionally made too small with the purpose of later having deficiency appropriations...
...Bryn Mawr College, and the Church of St. John the Divine of New York City are among the examples of sculpture on display. The most notable of the paintings are the costume designs of the Dramatic Club production, "The Liar," a fresco copy of the School of Botticelli, and cover designs for the Lampoon. There are also oil and water color landscapes, still life studies, and portrait drawings in several mediums...
Henry Edwards Scott, Jr., 2G of Medford was announced last night to be the winner of the Pi Eta poster competition. His design will be used on the cover of the program. Second place went to Parker Francis Pond '25 of Neponset, whose design will appear on the posters. Charles Hill Morgan, 2d., '24 of Worcester and Richard Lionel Wright of Utica, New York, received honorable mention. Wright, ex-student of the University and a member of the Pi Eta Club, is now studying at the Museum Art School in Boston...
...know very well that the press of our country, including nearly all of the great newspapers, has freely published all the interesting and important official Soviet documents they could get hold of. The amount of this matter would cover many thousands of columns every year, much of it exactly as sent out from Russia by the Soviet propaganda bureaus. Even the papers most violently accused of being against the Soviets, like The New York Times, have printed a vast amount of this material-in fact, they have taken the lead in that direction. You know that The New York Times...
...Testing their craft by a long flight across the continent from Seattle to the Atlantic coast, they will fly to Europe, probably by way of Greenland or Iceland, thence through Central and Southern Europe, Asia Minor, Arabia, India, China, Japan; and home by way of Alaska. This itinerary will cover 27,000 miles, nonrecognition of the Soviet Government precluding the much shorter route through Siberia...