Word: deal
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...second half-year. Professor G. W. Prothero, editor of the Quarterly Review, formerly Professor of History in the University of Edinburgh, and recently president of the Royal Historical Society of England offers History 30. This is a half-course on "The Creation of the British Empire," and will deal with the expansion of England and with the present-day administration of imperial affairs. It will meet on Mondays and Wednesday at 10 in Emerson...
...Graham Wallas, a former member of the London County Council, and now Lecturer in the London School of Economics, is to give three half-courses in Government. The first of these, Government 10, will deal with English National Government and will be open to undergraduates. The other two, which are primarily for graduates but open also to undergraduates who have had some training in history and political science, are to deal with English Local Government, Government 18, and with "The Psychological Conditions of Modern Government," Government 31. Mr. Wallas is well known to American readers through his recent remarkable book...
There has been a great deal of discussion recently among graduates and undergraduates as to whether it would be appropriate to place tablets in Memorial Hall commemorative of Harvard men who fell during the Civil War in the Confederate service...
...have heard a great deal recently in Cambridge and Boston to the effect that the elms in the Harvard Yard were being killed by the elm borer and that in five years the trees would all be dead. Two reasons are assigned for this: first, that the persons in charge can not come to an agreement as to how the trees should be treated, and second, lack of funds. It seems to me that if those in charge can not agree it would be well for them to submit the matter to some recognized authority on the subject...
There is a very real interest, and a great deal of pride among undergraduates in Mr. Sheldon's career. To have had Mrs. Fiske produce his first play and the New Theatre his second, is not only an enviable achievement for the author, but a hopeful forecast of that national drama towards which so much aspiration points...