Word: numberous
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...well over a dozen years since the Japan Society of New York got together a number of important Japanese works of art in a special exhibition. Since that time there has been no chance in America to see such things except in the comparatively monotonous form in which they are set out by the few museums which posess them. Mr. Charles Baine Hoyt's loan collection, just opened at the Fogg Museum, is therefore of more than local interest. Three rooms have been devoted to a pleasantly sparse distribution of potteries and paintings where even the laymen must...
...will deny the post-war necessity of limiting the number of students in the College, unfortunate as this restriction may be for those individuals who, having decided upon Harvard as the institution of their choice, are turned away. It is generally recognized that the war has overcrowded the classroom and lecture hall, and that universities and colleges throughout the country, have been forced to raise an admittance harrier in self-protection. Especially is this true of Harvard as a result of the rapidly increasing size of its Freshman classes since 1918. There must be some limit if students...
Beginning tomorrow, the CRIMSON will print the full text of the report in sections, dealing consecutively with the points treated by President in sections, dealing consecutively with the points treated by President Lowell. Included in the document are columns of figures supporting the observations on the increase of the number of distinction candidates, and figures giving the exact amount of monetary gifts received by the University during the past year...
Altogether the eighth "Follies" is one of those mammoth spectacles which, beginning in Boston, ultimately reaches New York without a single number of the opening night left in it. There it will not create a sensation but it will certainly carry on an old tradition before audiences which like its wares. Were it for its beautiful girls alone it would be played before capacity audiences. While Ziegfeld has his production on a higher plane of humor he certainly will have to look to the laurels of his "glorified" girls. After all, why are the "Follies" so popular if not because...
...program is as follows: Le reville-matin Couperin Le bavolet flottant Couperin Rondo alla Turca Mozart Variations serieuses Mendelssohn Fourth Sonata Scriabine Rigaudon, from "Le tombeau de Couperin" Ravel Alborada del graciosco Chopin Nocurne Chopin Deux ecossaises Chopin Hungarian Rhapsody number 13 Liszt