Word: planning
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Yale is planning an elaborate celebration for the 200th anniversary of the removal of Yale College from Saybrook, Conn., to New Haven, and of the 50th anniversary of the Yale School of Fine Arts next fall. A feature of the anniversary on Oct. 21 will be a pageant in the Yale Bowl in which 4000 persons will participate. The spectacle will be in charge of F. H. Markoe, of London, a graduate of Yale, who helped plan the last coronation pageant in London and who organized the recent South African pageant...
...investigation of our national defence and a comprehensive plan for the future should be an obligatory matter when Congress meets, for the navy belongs to the people of the country, and they have a right to know its condition and how it is being managed. The mere appropriation of a vast sum of money will not cause the necessary reorganization in order that actual conditions may be improved; in order that we may have a needed change in the way of military reform, which should be forced upon Congress by a widespread sentiment. This investigation and knowledge has been denied...
First comes a description of the new plan of conducting entrance exams and the new requirements for admission. Much attention is given to the combination with the University of Technology. The terms of the agreement are printed and the names of Technology professors giving courses, which are open to members of the University, are included. The names of M. I. T. students, taking courses in the University, under the rules for the combined degree, are printed both in the general University directory and again under a separate head among the class lists. A full account of the Technology courses open...
...speech before the members of the Regiment yesterday afternoon, Captain Cordier presented a "rough idea of what is proposed." Unfortunately, he can only devote the time which is not occupied by his office hours, to the Regiment, but he has devised a plan whereby sufficient instruction may be given...
...danger that cannot be met by adequate coast-defenses, besides such an army and navy as we have thought ourselves to possess, or the danger is such that we must prepare to mobilize all the resources of the country in men and means after the French or German plan. P. N. CRUSIUS...