Word: seavers
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...lectures, interesting particularly to all students connected with Fine Arts, will be given in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Huntington avenue, this Sunday afternoon. At 3 o'clock in Gallery IV, Mr. Philip L. Hale will speak on "Something About Technique". Following him, Mr. Henry L. Seaver will speak in the Tapestry Hall at 4 o'clock on "Some Notes on Tapestries". Both of these talks are open...
...remain, most humbly and all that, EDWIN SEAVER '22 E. PINCETON GREENE JR. 1S.A. January...
...better look to it that our own house was in order before we looked askance at the of another. I could not see and do not yet see how we, any more than they, avail ourselves of this "means of happiness" of which Mr. Parsons speaks so glibly. EDWIN SEAVER '22. November...
...anyone could so completely miss the point of your editorial on "The Iron Man", as did Mr. Seaver in his communication of the 16th, is a mystery to me. Not having "been to busy furthering civilization to give much thought to it", I find the ideas you there advanced rather compelling, as would anyone who did not read it with "a chip on his shoulder". The CRIMSON, I take it, did not "pass judgement" on anyone. It merely tried to point out that the Age of Machinery has brought with it fewer hours of labor--for the student as well...
What more natural, then, that we should adjust out school system, particularly the primary, so that education for the best possible enjoyment of leisure may replace present-day education for economic efficiency--alike for the laborer and Mr. Seaver's "young barbarians" in the colleges? After all, it is the educated people who, by the large, are the happiest; that background social, philosophical, aesthetic that detached point of view which education gives, somehow helps to preserve one's equanimity amid the vicissitudes of existence. Such being the case, Mr. Seaver can not, with decency, dub "Pharisee" and "hypocrite" those...