Word: fifteenth
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...prints have been chosen from the collection in the Fogg Museum to illustrate the technical processes used by the engravers from the middle of the fifteenth century to modern, times. The exhibition was originally planned more particularly for student taking Fine Arts 5F under Professor P. J. Sachs...
...head on Willard. Under the picture the American printed: "Gibbons began to back away from Dempsey's terrific body blows in the fourth. Here he is pressed up against the ropes..." The Associated Press reports said that the only time Gibbons "went to the ropes" was in the fifteenth round. This correction was incorporated in later editions of the American, But the American was not at all flustered by the expose. It accused the Tribune and the World of mudslinging. The American truthfully pointed out that it had not said in so many words that the picture...
...expedition directed by Baron Carl of Uggla, has excavated the medieval city of Old Lodose, near Gothenburg. This city was an important seaport and is thought to have flourished for upwards of a thousand years before it was destroyed in the middle of the Fifteenth Century in the wars between the Swedes and the Danes. A church almost as large as the Gothenburg Cathedral has been unearthed as well as several smaller churches, a hospital, a castle, city walls, private houses, armor, tools, coins and weapons...
This particular law undoubtedly works injustice to individuals: many will argue that they lose no more by cutting their class after a holiday than their fifth or fifteenth, whereas the corresponding gain may be very great. But this time it is not a question of the individual. Kant's "categorical imperative" fits the case conveniently: If everyone did as the individual feels inclined to do, there would be empty classrooms on the day before and after each holiday. Professors, rather than waste their lectures, would agree not to hold classes that day; students would proceed to extend the vacation still...
...Boston tomorrow. The first, beginning at 3 o'clock in the Fifth Century Room, will be delivered by Mr. W. H. J. Kennedy '12 on "Greek Grave Monuments". At 4 o'clock in the First Print Room. Miss Anna C. Hoyt will speak on "The Planets and Spheres of Fifteenth Century Italian Engravings." Both lectures will be open to the public...