Word: offerings
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...sincerely interested in furthering the progress of College theater," said W. Todd Parsons '48, president of the Hasty Pudding Club Theatricals, "and are more than pleased to offer our facilities to HDC." The agreement was hailed by the Dramatic Club, which has often been sorely handicapped by lack of adequate production space...
...principal advantages of a large community or a large College is the great variety of activity that is open to any individual. By shutting the College activities out of the Houses the Masters will only eliminate the primary advantage of bigness and will be unable to offer any worthwhile substitute. As long as there is no real center of undergraduate life in a more convenient location than Phillips Brooks House, the Houses are the only ground on which the activities can operate when they require direct contact with the student body...
...Frequency Modulation stations the FCC can force radio to approximate standards set up by the listeners' councils which Sieppmann urges. This is all good thinking, and is complemented by the suggestion of Frederick Wakeman, author of "The Hucksters," that stations set up their own programs and offer them for sale take-it-or-leave-it, eliminating sponsor-manipulated advertising agencies. Sieppmann's big thesis is that FM is the coming thing, and that in the process of changing over radio has its second chance and obligation to produce programs bearing some relevance to the industry's announced yearning to serve...
...finances are one of the primary objections to more tutorial for worthy students, it is regrettable that appropriations should fall to an advisory system which is at best inadequate. It can only be adequate when there is available a supply of advisors with the ability and the time to offer a reasonable tutorial substitute for the masses...
...curious fact is that this very language was provoked by a strong movement in this country to aid the establishment of a democratic government in Greece, which was then under the rule of an "imperialistic" power named Turkey. Monroe wanted to offer some definite aid to the Greek rebels of 1823-but John Quincy Adams (the General Marshall of that day) persuaded...