Word: discuss
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Dean Hodges' Bible class, which has met in the Noble Room, Phillips Brooks House, heretofore on Wednesday nights, will meet this week and regularly hereafter on Tuesday nights at 7 o'clock. The class has taken up thus far the books of Genesis and Exodus; tonight Dean Hodges will discuss Leviticus and Deuteronomy. The class is open to all men in the University...
...Hodges' Bible class, which has met in the Noble Room, Phillips Brooks House, heretofore on Wednesday nights, will meet this week and regularly hereafter on Tuesday nights at 7 o'clock. The class has taken up thus far the books of Genesis and Exodus: tomorrow night Dean Hodges will discuss Leviticus and Deuteronomy. The class is open to all men in the University...
Last night a meeting of the membership committee of the Union was held to discuss the best method of interesting more men in the Union, and a large committee was appointed from the two lower classes to find out the reasons why so many men in these classes have failed to become members. In this way it is hoped not only to call the attention of many of the advantages offered by the Union, but also to secure valuable data by which its attractiveness may be increased...
...thirty-seventh annual convention of the Young Men's Christian Associations of Massachusetts and Rhode Island will be held at Gloucester, Mass., today, tomorrow and Sunday. The object of the convention is to discuss the work of the associations in the two states and the different problems which confront the workers. Mr. A. S. Johnson '85, of Boston, will preside, and Dean Hodges, of the Episcopal Theological School, R. S. Wallace '04, P. E. Osgood '04 and G. E. Huggins '01 will be among the speakers...
...tone of the editorial in Monday's CRIMSON was so extraordinary that I should like to express what I feel so strongly that I am sure that others must feel it too. I do not mean to discuss the "niceness" of dealing out editorial sarcasms--practically personal in one paragraph--to amateur athletes. But I should like to protest against the composition of more communications and editorials of the variety that has been so common this autumn, and of which Monday's article was an exaggerated instance. Let me identify further what I mean by quoting two sentences which...