Word: phased
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Perhaps no phase of college life is so incomprehensible to the layman as the part played by the various tutoring schools. In reviewing a course, the material of the lectures is condensed and sweetened, the essence of the outside reading carefully extracted and flavored, and the whole fed to the faltering student in- a form most readily assimilated by his starved intellect. Repudiated by some, instructors, ignored by the faculty at large, these establishments conduct a thriving business,-and will continue to prosper just as long as they satisfy the need of the undergraduate...
...scrap books kept by R. H. Derby and J. A. Dillon of the class of 1864 and dealing with every phase of life at the University in those days has recently been received at the Widener Library and is being kept for the present in the Pressure Room. In addition to programs examination papers and clippings, the scrap books contain accounts of special happenings such as the visit of the Prince of Wales, cases of hazing boat races, and the Commencement...
...many words brought into prominence by the war is "propaganda" with its various connotations. In 1947, the term conjured up visions of innumerable lurking Teutions, spying upon our defenses and undermining society in general. Nowadays it suggests Sinn Fein. Bolshovism, or the Loyal Coalition. Education, industry, polities, almost every phase of our national life is disturbed by propaganda of one sort or another. Some of it is instigated from abroad, but most of it originates with "true-hearted American citizens...
...players to take advantage of this opportunity to familiarize himself with causes and effects and the methods which bring about the effects by logical development and without the entrance of the element of chance to any greater degree than is found in life in the business world. This phase of the football training fully deserves special mention because it adds just that much to the other and more obvious advantages which participation in the game merits...
...Fitzroy Carrington, Curator of Prints for the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and lecturer at the University on the History of Engraving, will give his third lecture on Florentine Engraving this afternoon at 4.30 in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum. The lecture, taking up the phase of Engravings in the Broad Manner; the Triumphs of Petrarch; Robetta; and Pollaiuolo, will complete the series. Screen illustrations will be used and the lecture will be open to the public...