Word: felted
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Roberts' article of April 15 is open to the same criticism. I can sympathize with his point of view. Oxford is so vital, genial, and beautiful that few Americans with any sensibility can visit it without the feeling "Why cannot we have this in America?" That was how I felt after three weeks there, in the gorgeous summer...
...promote social contact and professional association among members of the Harvard Law School, and to afford opportunities for their meeting and dining together." The only other eating club in the Law School, besides the Lincoln's Inn, the Chancery Club is taking its part in fulfilling a need long felt in the School...
...Faculty. The President has always expressed himself in favor of getting the students of the University together socially. A member of the Law School Faculty said at one of the early meetings of the Club that, although he was not in favor of doing away with classroom work, he felt that it should be supplanted by discussion of the law among the students themselves, an opportunity for which is offered by such a society as the Chancery Club...
...felt that if all the members were elected, only men who were prominent in the undergraduate eye would attain membership, it was decided that five men should be appointed. In this way men of great ability who are, nevertheless, not so well known to their classmates, are enabled to take part in the work of the Council; and, in addition, by this means groups not likely to become parts of the Council can gain a representative...
...says, "The version of Mr. Ives seems to me masterly to a very high degree; it was worth waiting for, and completely supersedes all precursors. I hope this admirable work may eventually take its place as the authorized English translation." The "Gorgeous Gallery of Gallant Inventions," supplies the much felt need of all students of Elizabethan literature. This is the first time that this work has been reprinted since its original publication in 1578. It is based on one of the two copies in existence. The particular copy on which this is based formerly belonged to Edmund Malone. "Bruce Rogers...