Word: interpreting
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...expressionistic stage and will attempt to depict the various moods through which the play progresses. The lighting system that will be used was devised by Donald Stralem '24. Music for the play has been composed by Conrad Salinger '23, and this, like the scenery, is intended to interpret the varying moods of the play...
About 400 people attended the exhibition basketball game last night at Hemenway Gymnasium, given under the auspices of the Eastern Massachusetts Board of Approved Basketball Officials. The object of the game was to demonstrate and interpret the new changes in basketball rules made this year. Two teams, picked from last year's University and Freshman squads, played under the new rulings...
...Allen chose a text as follows: "Where there is no vision the people perish; but he that keeneth the law, happy is he". To interpret his text he restated it. Where there is no vision the people cast off restraint; where there is no restraint the people perish". He stated as his belief that there was a breaking down of moral standards which could not be accounted for by the war or by the heterogeneity of the United States. "The only safeguard of any country", he stated, "is the respect of the people for law. We cannot expect a future...
...long interval of silence has been due to important discoveries which our excavators have made near the site of Inca University, but which it has taken time to correlate and interpret. The result is an enlightening account of the refectories and outside caravansaries where the students ate their meals. Unbelievable as it may seem, it is an established fact of physiology that a man's mental capacity is vitally affected by his diet. From a survey of the restaurants, dining-halls, and food-shops in the vicinity, even in their present ruined condition, we can glean some significant facts about...
Monday night we heard about the Washington Conference from the point of view of the participants. Tonight we shall hear about it as seen by a highly trained and intensely curious spectator eager to analyze and interpret all that took place. Mr. Sullivan's attitude was that of the public. The unusual success of his articles on the Conference and on many preceding events of political interest, his close acquaintance with leaders of both parties, and, above all, our recollection of his talk in the Union a year ago are sufficient assurance that his address tonight will be a genuine...