Word: museume
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...clock Memorial Hall Sophocies, 3.15-4.15 o'clock Memorial Hall FRIDAY, APRIL 30 History and Literature, general examination, 9-1 o'clock Memorial Hall Virgil, Horace, Plato, Aristotle, Chaucer, Milton, Dante, Cervantes, Moliere, Goethe, 2-4 o'clock Memorial Hall SATURDAY, MAY 1 Anthropology, written Peabody Museum MONDAY, MAY 3 English Literature, 2-5 o'clock Memorial Hall TUESDAY, MAY 4 Greek translation; Honors, Distinction and second year Honors, 9-12 o'clock. Sever 25 French, Spanish, German, Italian literatures, 2-5 o'clock New Lect. Hall Greek Composition (Greek 3 and 7), 2-5 o'clock New Lect. Hall...
...publisher's spring lists contain many a standard commodity. Mr. E. Phillips Oppenheim's vast museum now includes The Golden Beast (Little, Brown). Miss Ethel M. Dell submits A Man Under Authority (Putnam). Harvey O'Higgins has a successor to Julie Cane in Clara Barron (Harpers). Irvin Cobb's new tales, more pensive than usual, are all On an Island That Cost $24 (Doran). Katharine Haviland Taylor is out again, with Stanley Johns' Wife (Doran), and Albert Payson Terhune with Treasure (Harpers...
...note book referred to in the grant," said Professor Lowes when the CRIMSON reporter went to see him at his office in Warren House, "is a manuscript volume of about 90 leaves now in the British Museum. The notebook was in possession of a school-friend of his, Matthew Gutch and was purchased by the Museum in the sixties. In my judgement it is the most important of all the numerous notebooks which Coleridge left...
...capitol at Washington. Lentze was also commissioned to paint the portrait for Justice Taney's daughter, a Mrs. J. M. Campbell, the wife of a noted lawyer of Baltimore. Lentze is probably best remembered by his painting of "Washington Crossing the Delaware", which now hangs in the Metropolitan Museum in New York. The painting of Judge Taney, which is three-quarter length and life size, was done when the Judge was in his eighty-third year...
...vagabond who is at all addicted to sporting with words, whether he considers himself a literary oak or not, can do much worse than to hear Professor Tozzer talk about the acorns of our language. At 9 o'clock this morning, he will lecture in the Semitic Museum in Anthropology I on the origin of writing and the beginnings of our alphabet...