Word: obviously
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Tickets at $1.25 a throw are the only necessities for the joyous occasion. These may be bought at Leavitt & Peirce's, Matthews 1, or Thayer 32. The advantages of being a ticket-holder are obvious. In the first place, no one else will be allowed at the picnic. Moreover the following commodities will be furnished to everyone possessing a pasteboard certificate: Transportation to the island,--and back if desired; costume, which may be obtained in Thayer Common Room today or tomorrow; lunch; real refreshments; entertainment...
...Peddler's Pack" is vivid, imaginative, individual, quaint--much the best thing in the number, both in conception and in execution. "An Aesthete's Nightmare" proves how rare the extreme aesthete type is in our midst--Mr. Dos Passos would never have to resort to such obvious and wholesome objects of art as the Venus de Milo, a Buddha, and Parrish's "Pirate Ship" if he had ever seen the animal in the wild state in his native lair--in Oxford, for instance...
...reported for the Eliot and Thayer Club crews yesterday. Two crews only were able to be made up, and went out on the river to receive their first instruction from Coach Brown. The showing was much worse than either that of this spring or last fall. It is obvious that many men who should come out are not doing so, and the management is very anxious to see more men tomorrow, when they are to report at 4.30 o'clock. The lack of coxswains is especially in evidence. More men are needed for this position, all men who have...
...obvious value of these examinations lies in the detection of a certain amount of disease, which, if detected early enough, can be cured. A number of such cases were discovered, and were subsequently corrected. Some cases, too, were detected which call for careful observation, perhaps throughout the college course...
...Burk contributes a new number in the series of articles on contemporary composers which the Review has been publishing--this time on the Finnish composer Sibelius. Mr. Burk shows knowledge and obvious sympathy with the music of Sibelius, who is, however, now appreciated as he should be--except, as Mr. Burk points out, in New York. While this article is at times marred by a few slight immaturities of style--such as the rather patronizing attempt to give the readers advice as to the appreciation of Sibelius--it is nevertheless interesting and distinctly worth while...