Word: intendent
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...following is the second series of articles and interviews given to the Crimson by recipients of the recent Milton Fund awards. These articles describe in some detail the work of investigation or research which their authors intend to carry on in their respective fields...
...printers had refused to work without pay and that the Lampoon was deeply in dept and unable to pay its bills. All the furniture and bric-a-brac belong either to former editors who have loaned them or to furniture firms. Two firms are involved, both of which intend to collect the furniture in forfeit of instalments never paid. In addition Lampy owes money to caterers, advertising agencies, engraving companies and printers and to the CRIMSON, and Lampy's sole employee, Bob Lampoon. Because of perennially late publication and discourteons treatment by the business department, all of Lampy's advertisers...
...Browne and Nichols Building of Radcliffe College. The second meeting for the same purpose will be held Wednesday evening, March 25. Both are special meetings in a series accompanying the Graduate School of Education courses in the Teaching of Music. They are designed especially for those who intend to hear the performance of the "Requiem" by the Radcliffe Choral Society and the Harvard Glee Club with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Mr. Koussevitsky, on March 28. They are, however, open to all those interested in enlarging their understanding and enjoyment of the "Requiem". Copies of the entire...
...have been substituted to freight supplies to Point Barrow, where Captain George Wilkins will arrive in April with his pilots and two Fokker planes. One pilot, Lieutenant Carl B. Eielson has flown over 60,000 miles all alone in the Alaskan airmail service between Fairbanks and McGrath. These men intend heading north and northwest from Point Barrow, exploring the "blind-spot," passing over the Pole and on down the other side of the world to Spitzbergen...
...made a curious recommendation concerning high school curricula. According to the report in "Time", the society desires a closer alliance of secondary school subjects with those of the grammar chool. As a reason for this liaison, the argument is urged that since only a small proportion of the students intend entering college, their needs should not dominate the courses given. In the theory of the immortal average, the greatest good of the greatest number, this attitude finds its justification...