Word: remodels
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...best means of fulfilling the requirement of the English Department for one course in Pre-Shakespearian literature is a year of Chaucer. There are already graduate courses in the field, for example, English 4 (Middle English: Language and Literature from 1150 to 1400), and it seems highly advisable to remodel English 1 on the lines of the tremendously popular courses in Chaucer at Yale and Princeton. At present there is no course at Harvard devoted to the study of one of the greatest and most neglected figures in English literature as a poet rather than as a specimen of philology...
...volunteered Dr. Howard Leighton Updegraff of Hollywood, plastic surgeons can do what they are doing for Doris Johnson's hand. For head disfigurements it is now possible to remake eyebrows and lashes with snips of scalp. linings of the eyelids with mucous membrane from the mouth, and to remodel noses, lips and ears with skin grafts. Burned faces, said Dr. Updegraff, are more common now than in Wartime...
...Dunster House Book Shop will eventually be located on the ground floor of the new Advocate building at the corner of Mr. Auburn and Plympton Streets, but legal difficulties with the present occupants of the building have made it impossible to remodel the street floor in time for the Book Shop's occupancy...
...replace its present inadequate quarters, the Advocate has purchased and will completely remodel, for occupancy next fall, the building located at 53 Mt. Auburn Street, opposite the Lampoon Building, C. L. Sulzberger '34, president, announced last night. Simultaneously with this change in its location, the Advocate will inaugurate a new policy for the magazine itself, starting with the next issue...
...succession of trained nurses, asks each one to be his wife. With imperious disregard for dignity, he lets a village shyster cheat him out of the family fortune. Furious at his children's well-meant attempts to interfere, he gives orders for workmen to tear down his chateau, remodel it to suit his whims. He walks through his woods dressed in a smock painted to look like leaves, puts a green napkin over his head, sits down on a stone to make friends with the lizards. The efforts of William Colombe's children to control the follies...