Word: fined
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Today 9.15 o'clock Economics 39New Lect. Hall Fine Arts 14f-g Fogg Lect. Rm. French 2 Prof. Whittem, sect. 3 Memorial Hall Mr. Chalufour, sect. 14 Memorial Hall Mr. Mellor. sects. 2, 11 Memorial Hall Mr. Rouillard, sects. 1, 6 Memorial Hall Mr. Lincoln, sect. 4 New Lect. Hall Mr. Mitrani, sect. 8 New Lect. Hall Mr. Pillionnel, sects. 7, 13 New Lect. Hall Mr. Saintonge, sects. 10, 17 New Lect. Hall Mr. Solano, sect. 9 New Lect. Hall Mr. Parcell, sect. 12 Emerson D Mr. Miller, sect. 15 Emerson D Mr. Raiche, sect. 5 Emerson D Mr. Stone...
Yale has loaned to Harvard an extremely fine painting by Antonio Pollaiuolo, a Florentine painter of the high Renaissance whose canvasses later influenced the style of Michel Angelo, it was made public yesterday. The masterpiece will be exhibited at the opening of the new Fogg Museum of Art on next Monday, and will remain there throughout the summer months, while the new Yale Museum is being built...
Today 9.15 o'clock Anthropology AMemorial Hall Chemistry 6 Alypert-Roberston Sever 23 Seaton-Young Sever 24 Comp. Literature 9 Amster-Lynch Sever 5 McMahan-Willis Sever 6 Economics 8 Sever 11 English 14 Harvard 5 Fine Arts 9a Old Fogg Lect. Rm. Geology 5 Allen-Nissen Geol, Lect Room O'Neil-Wood Harvard 2 Geology 10 Rotch Bldg. German 2 II Sever 17 German 26b Harvard 3 Government 7b New Lect. Hall Greek A Sever 30 Greek 11 Sever 30 History 30b Andrade-Block Harvard 2 Bock-Young Harvard 6Mathematics 2 IV Sever 29Mathematics 39 Sever 30Music 3 Sever...
...wildness, surpassed his previous showing in the game won by Pennsylvania on their in- vasion of Soldiers Field. He allowed four hits in all, and until a slip in the eighth inning threatened a shutout. After collecting a four run lead for Sanford the Penn team continued to offer fine support until the next to the last inning when Harvard pushed over its only...
...involved as law briefs. It is not overstating the case to say that the reading periods as instituted next year-will have a very definite reaction on the work done in summer vacations. At present the average man feels that reading done independently and without coercion is very fine but it has little to do with his scholastic success in college. He must eventually learn, however, that reading with or without an incentive is seldom quite barren of results. Even in August an afternoon spent looking at a book must leave some impression on the mind, the exact permancy being...