Word: scope
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Professor T. W. Richards '86, who will have full charge of the building, will have his offices on the second floor, including his private library which is wide enough in scope to satisfy the needs of students. The second floor will also contain two chemical laboratories, one for crude and the other for very accurate work, a physical laboratory, a balance room, a dark room and an apparatus room. These rooms have been arranged very compactly and easy access may be had from any one to another. On the top floor are located four large and two small chemical laboratories...
...making the tone oppressively heavy and overpowering successfully avoided. Yet the life, buoyancy and moving power of the mass of tone has been abundantly maintained. Those in charge of the work declare that the aim of furnishing the Chapel with an instrument worthy of its environment, broad in scope and varied in resource, has been fully realized...
...recent meeting summoned by the Committee on Organization of the Student Council over 2b representatives of an many territorial clubs incl. and or ranized the Harvard federation of Territorial Clubs. The scope and functions of the Federation were discussed and the general plan enthusiastically received. The Federation will supply the need for co-operation among the territorial clubs and with the Associated Harvard Clubs, and will be a nucleus for the formation of new clubs. Information valuable in such undertakings as the new Freshman dormitory plans, will be furnished by the Federation...
...Date-Book is a public calendar of coming events. Its scope is very broad. It not only aims to present a complete calendar of events, but also,--and perhaps even more important,--it undertakes to arrange dates in advance in such a way as to avoid conflicts. For example, the dates for the Symphony Concerts in Sanders, the Whiting Recitals, the Noble Lectures, etc., were arranged by means of the Date-Book; and events of University interest, from meetings of Registered ("interest") Clubs, to dramatic productions of the various organizations, come within its scope...
Professor Rafael Altamira of the University of Oviedo, Spain, delivered a lecture on "Literature as the Fountain of Spanish History" in Emerson D last night. Professor Altamira's subject does not indicate the scope of his address. He endeavored to show the general value of literature to the historian and took Spanish history as an example. There is little positively known of some of the greatest events in Spanish history; they are obscured in myth and legend. But that is not all. Having lost their orientalism, the Spanish people ask how they came to be what they are. Is there...