Word: covered
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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This freak bug is not a dominant type. It fades out rapidly and leaves a prolific generation of the authentic black and white variety. The freak may be recognised by a decided tendency to run wild and to cover in area what it lacks in depth-in short, by a total absence of any specific gravity. For this reason it is a welcome visitor to the overburdened college mind...
...substance of the majority of the lectures which are given could be got by the student far better and in far less time from books which are readily available, and most lecturers, in attempting to 'cover the ground' in a given number of lectures, greatly overtax the capacity of their students by assimilating by ear long chains of fact and argument. There is a case for special lectures given by the expert for the purpose of expounding and testing a new discovery; there is a case for the popular lecture as a means of arousing attention; but there...
...with Germany under conditions more certain and less fluctuating and sporadic than they are now. Facing dangerous possibilities of the complete diplomatic face-about in Black Sea affairs,--Turkey's alliance with the arch enemy Russia,--England finds that her friendship with France needs a touch of cement to cover over the cracks left by Lloyd-George recent experiments in Asia Minor...
...competition for the design to be used on the cover of the program for the Junior Dance will begin today, the Committee announced last night...
...long time has the Harvard Lampoon had such an accomplished force of artists. The cover by F. W. Saunders shows an ability far beyond the ordinary, while his other pieces, such as "The Important Clogs in the Yale Machine", "Black to Mate in One", etc., are finished examples of caricature. Nat Choate is inimitable in his Prologue decoration and his page on "Personal Touches for the Arrow Man". The "By the Way" illustration in red and black and the page entitled "Annual Crackers" shows Charles Child at his best. His delicacy and control of line seem to indicate that...