Word: select
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Numbering slightly under 100 concentrators, the field is considered fairly small and select. For this reason, a greater degree of student-professor intimacy exists than in more crowded departments. The concentrators are drawn together by their consuming interest in Anthropology, and groups can usually be found congregated on the steps of Peabody Museum and in Radcliffe's Eliot Hall...
...average reader's imagination. A Shakespeare becomes an exception through an excess of sheer creative power, a Shaw through saucy verbal glitter, but so far there has been just one Shakespeare and one Shaw. With The Cocktail Party, T. S. Eliot moved very close to the select circle of playwrights who can be read with pleasure. With The Lady's Not for Burning, Britain's Christopher Fry (TIME, April 3) edges past him into the circle itself. Written in verse with a fine sense of theater, The Lady is a play that needs no theater illusions...
Professor G. Wallace Woodworth '24 and other members of the Music Department will select the chorister...
...judges who will select the odist and the poet are John A. Ciardi, Briggs-Copeland Assistant Professor of English Composition, Archibald MacLeish, Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, Theodore Morrison '23, Director of English A, Edward F. Burke '50, and Robert Claflin...
Several meetings will aid freshmen to select a field of concentration. A compulsory meeting will be held at 9 a.m. Saturday in Sanders Theatre. Dean Leighton will give an introductory talk, and Gordon M. Fair, Master of Dunster House, will discuss concentration in relation to the House plan. Robert Amory, Jr. '36, professor of Law, will discuss the relation of concentration to graduate study...