Word: symposium
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Eight early poems of Eliot's are being reprinted together with a number of special articles and a symposium of critical appreciation. The poems, which appeared in the Advocate while Eliot was an undergraduate, were written in the period from 1907-1910, and are accompanied by a commentary on his early work by Lawrence B. Leighton, Instructor in Greek and Latin...
Contributing to the Symposium are: Conrad Aiken '11 (who was an editor of the Advocate at the same time as Eliot); Howard Baker, poet and Instructor in English; Richard Eberhart, poet and teacher of English at St. Mark's School, South borough; Robert T.S. Lowe '11; Archibald MacLeish, Curator of the Nieman Collection; Merrill Moore, sonneteer and Associate in Psychiatry; George Marion O'Donell, Frederick Prokosch, Wallace Stevens, Allen Tate, William Carlos Williams, and Robert Penn Warren, all prominent contemporary writers...
When the Lowell House undergraduate symposium takes place next week, a significant protest against overspecialization will, consciously or not, have been recorded. Not only because of its interesting subject matter but also because of the novel method of presentation, the symposium should be a success...
With President Conant as chairman, and three famed scientific authorities as principal speakers, a symposium is to be held at the Harvard Club of Boston next Wednesday evening at 8:30 o'clock. The general subject of the meeting is "Medicine and Life Today: A Discussion of Scientific Research and the Problems of Medicine...
...including nationalization of banks, property and labor. The Prime Minister's brave proposals come to nothing, but by the time his cabinet, his constituents, a fierce young female Marxist (Ardis Gains), and his family have indicated their more or less reluctant disapproval, audiences have been treated to a symposium so full of sparkling, perfectionist common sense that they may well forget that they have seen nothing closer to physical action than a young agitator's feeble threat to break a window...