Word: domes
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...person whose papers are not in order." Mr. Blackmer is urgently wanted in the U. S. as a witness in the coming (October) trial of Albert B. Fall, onetime (1921-23) Secretary of the Interior, and Harry F. Sinclair, oil man, for conspiracy in the famed Teapot Dome scandal. Last May Mr. Blackmer refused to honor a subpoena to return and testify; the passport revocation followed, presumably with the intention of preventing Mr. Blackmer from leaving France for even more distant regions. Not but that he can get out of France without a passport, but he cannot legally enter...
...Professor Post given in Fine Arts 9a on Michael Angelo. The versatlle artist one of the greatest figures of the Renaissance, lived an interesting life in an interesting period. Any one of a number of works would have been sufficient to keep his name alive--the Sistine Chapel, the Dome of St. Peter's, the Medical Chapel...
...annual Pops Concerts of Boston, to be held this year between May 2 and July 2, date back to the earliest stages of Boston's musical history. They are indeed as much a part of Boston as the Common or the golden-dome of the State House. One would hunt in vain in other cities for anything just like the Pops...
...appoint a committee to review the entire proceedings, with the possible result of giving the condemned a new trial; 2) of his own responsibility, grant pardons to Mr. Sacco, to Mr. Vanzetti; 3) may let the law take its course. When, in his office beneath the Golden Dome of the State House at Boston, he sits down to consider his decision, what arguments are there that might lead him to decide in favor of the shoemaker and the fish-peddler? What is the case for Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti...
Better than a palace with a gilded dome, thinks President Lowell of Harvard University, is a college dormitory or group of dormitories where all the men of one class live more or less together. Class solidarity was President Lowell's aim when, some years ago, Harvard wiped out its "gold coast" of expensive, privately operated dormitories-Claverly, Ridgely, Randolph and Westmorley Halls-by buying them and housing all seniors together. Class solidarity was the aim when dormitories were lately built along the Charles River, where Harvard freshmen are compelled to abide. But last week President Lowell's work...