Word: orally
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...small crater while the inhabitants of Ponguelano scurried from alleys going toward the large cellar which Armakeli had built; he had once said in one of his ecstatic moments that to die happily one had to be prostrate, with mouth opened and with a spout directly above the oral cavity so that the light iodine coloured wine which he made might trickle downward from a flagon. Modest but confident he had prognosticated to a skeptical people that the day would arrive when they would no longer laugh at his whimsicalities but praise his foresight; and the day had come. Armakeli...
Each year, 20 prominent Eastern colleges participate in the convention which is founded on the belief that only through proper oral rendition can poetry achieve its ultimate possibilities as a means of aesthetic enjoyment. the following is a list of colleges participating; Harvard, Radcliffe, Adelpai, Amherst. Harvard, Brooklyn, City College of New York, Cambridge College for Women, Dartmouth, Hunter Mt. Holyoke, New York University, Rhode Island College of Education, Russell Sage, Sarah Lawrence, Smith, Vassar, and Wells. Last year, D.I. Moore '33 was Harvard's delegate, and Margot Clark represented Radcliffe...
...Philosophy and Special Psychological Topics Emerson 211 9.15--12.15 Sociology (General--Part Two) Emerson 211 Wednesday, May 10 9.15--12.15 Greek Composition (Greek 3 and 7) Sever 29 9.15--1.15 History, Government, and Economics, Special Memorial Hall 9.15--12.15 History of Modern Philosophy Emerson F Thursday, May 11 Anthropology (oral) Peabody Museum 9.15--12.15 Biochemical Sciences Emerson D 9.15--1.15 Fine Arts (General) Large Fogg Lecture Room 9.15--12.15 Latin Composition (Latin 3 and 7) Emerson D 9.15--12.15 Literature, Ancient Authors (Honors) Emerson D 9.15--12.15 Sociology Emerson D Friday, May 12 Anthropology (oral) Peabody Museum 9.15--12.15 Geology...
Each year representatives from 20 or more prominent Eastern colleges gather to foster interest in the reading of poetry. The Convention is founded on the belief that only through proper oral rendition can poetry achieve its ultimate possibilities as a means of aesthetic enjoyment. The program consists of a series of five-minute recitations by the delegates, each of whom chorses his own poetry...
Daily prepared reading is supplemented by a book of outside reading to be done about every month and a half. Tests come with a lamentable frequency which necessitates doing considerable work on the books in question. There is no composition work; a slight amount of oral dictation is the only writing done. On the whole the course can certainly not be called interesting because of the class drudgery, nor on the other hand can it be called hard unless one finds German way over his head. No particular advance in the style of conducting the class or in the work...