Word: maining
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...field of Sociology as Edward Heinmann, Niles Carpenter, Robert S. Lynd, the author of "Middletown," R. M. McIver, Pitirim A. Sorokin, Chairman of the Department of Sociology at Harvard and Carle C. Zimmerman, associate professor of Sociology has been arranged for the delegates. The sociologists have chosen for the main theme of the meeting, "The part of Sociology in the Reconstruction Program," and the speeches will deal in the main with this subject...
...conference will open with a general meeting in the Ballroom, during which the speakers will be Edward Heinmann, Niles Carpenter and Robert S. Lynd. At 11 o'clock, following the speeches, the members will break up into Round Table groups to discuss aspects of the main topic. Professor Zimmerman will lead a seminar on "Research Policies Relevant to Reconstruction Programs." Other seminars will be conducted by Frank H. Hankins of Smith, M. C. Elmer of the University of Pittsburgh, William C. Casey of Columbia, and Albert Morris of Boston University...
...unique tennis ladder has been initiated by the Lowell House Committee. Rankings have been posted on the main bulletin board, and men challenge those ranking above them. Horace B. Shepard '34, Bartram Kelley 1G, and William P. Rockwell '35 are the first three ranking players...
...swarm out over the ice with their long, hooked gaffs, begin bashing in seals' skulls right & left. Swilers never shoot seals, except in self-defense against an angry, sharp-toothed male, but they sometimes make the ice fly in front of their rivals in the race to the main herd, and sometimes a bullet goes astray. A swiler must be light on his feet, for a seal can lollop over the ice as fast as a man can run. A good swiler can skin a seal in 40 to 60 seconds, and may take as many as 120 sculps...
...know where he was. Then he had stepped off the 20th Century Limited in Chicago, gone straight to a new dormitory at the south edge of the University campus with his three well-worn suitcases. He was using Chicago as a quiet base at which to prepare for his main mission in the U. S., the delivery of Cornell University's Messenger Lectures for 1934. Besides his ''Expanding Universe" talk he gave Chicago, while he was there, his more metaphysical lecture, "Science and Experience." He dined with President & Mrs. Hutchins, met a few socialites, congratulated his fellow...