Word: specials
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Following is a list of the 40 courses, reviews of which will feature Monday's issue of the CRIMSON. They are primarily reviews of advanced courses for uppergraduates, a special "1931 Guide" having speared last. Thursday containing reviews of all courses open to Freshmen. A few of these will be appropriately reprinted. Anthropology 1. Astronomy 1. Biology A. Comparative Literature 6a. Economics A, 2, 8a. English 2, 5, 22, 31, 33, 72. Fine Arts 1c and 1d. French 2, 3, 6. Geology 4. German 25a. Government 1, 17a, 19. Greek 2. History C, 1, 5a, 7, 9, 30a, 32a. Military...
Toward the close of his Freshman year each undergraduate is required to select a special field in which to concentrate his attention during his last three years. A tutor is assigned to him, who is responsible for the preparation of the candidate to try his divisional examinations in his Senior year. The tutor guides the choice of courses and supplements with personal instruction and advice the student's work in his courses. Reading assigned by the tutor is discussed at conferences at intervals of about two weeks. Occasional written work may be required...
This knowledge may be displayed, in general, in two ways: either by passing special one-hour examinations in the several subjects mentioned above, or by obtaining certain grades in certain courses in Harvard College, of which more will be said later. The first series of the special examinations will be given on Saturday afternoon at times and places announced on the official bulletin boards and in the CRIMSON...
...response other masterpieces dripped from the brush of Jerdanowitsch. One showed a jet-black Negress at a washtub, with socks hanging on a clothes line overhead. Displayed at the No-Jury Exhibition (Marshall Field's, 1926) under the title "Aspiration," it was selected out of 480 others for special praise and reproduction by the Art World of Chicago. Wrote Lena McCauley, art critic of the Chicago Evening Post: "It is a delightful jumble of Gauguin, Pop Hart and Negro minstrelsy with...
...tourist" is the ticket Thos. Cook & Son have ordered for their first flight. It "will be printed on parchment paper and will be about the size and general appearance of college diplomas. The members of this pioneer tour can then frame their tickets and keep them as souvenirs. A special sticker for the handbags of the flying tourists is also being prepared in orange and black. . . ." Decorum. Precise advice: "Don't worry. Relax, settle back and enjoy life. If there's any worrying to be done let the pilot do it: that's what...