Word: dates
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...undergraduate is possibly less subject to the complex than are his elders: to him Friday usually means fish and the beginning of a weekend. But even he is likely to become uneasy on gazing at the current date-line. Even he cannot throw off the accumulated weight of ages: the most unlucky of days, coincidental with the most unlucky of numbers--one's callow self-confidence wavers...
...definite hours have been arranged as yet for the meetings of the course, and the examination group has not been decided, but a provisional hour and date has been agreed upon. The time will be announced later...
...will be given a special opportunity to hear the Chicago Opera Company, as the result of the management's decision to have one night of the second week set aside as Harvard night, it was announced last night to the CRIMSON by Wallace Goodrich of the Managing Committee. The date of the special night has not been definitely decided upon as yet, but it is understood that either Monday or Wednesday will be the time. The season will open Monday, January 30, at 8 o'clock...
About the end of February, the Glee Club will present, in conjunction with Mr. Koussevitsky and the members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Stravinsky's "Oedipus Rex". April 1 has been set as a tentative date for the performance of "King David", a striking oratorio by Arthur Honegger, in which the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Radcliffe Choral Society, and famous soloists will take part. Separate rehearsals for this concert are now going on, and joint rehearsals will begin in Paine Hall next week. The third of the annual concert series in Symphony Hall will be given on April...
...arsenals, which naturally can underbid private concerns. Private munitions-making for the U. S. tends to be not only profitless but costly. Members of the Army Ordnance Associations- civilian industries organized under reserve officers and the Assistant Secretary of War-spend large sums keeping up-to-date their factory plans and personnel for munitions-making. It would be not only just but wise for the U. S. to give "educational" orders to such industries. During a war, the U. S. would depend upon civilian arsenals almost entirely. The U. S. arsenals could turn out only 10% of the tanks...