Word: weeks
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...exhibition is being held in the rooms of the Society, and will be open to the public from 10 o'clock until 6 o'clock on week days. The following artists are represented...
...shelves in the Main Reading Room of Widener Library. These books may be taken out Saturday evening and not returned until Monday morning. Such an arrangement is quite admirable from the standpoint of abstract liberality, but is necessarily harmful in frequent instances where examinations are held early in the week, and one student has control for two days of several books important in the course. Probably this situation arises rather from the neglect of the individual instructors than from inefficiency in the Reading Room itself; but it should be remediable without relying on faulty memories or a shifting of books...
...perfectly workable in Widener. A system under which the Museum Library was closed Sunday, and books could be obtained only for the Saturday-to-Monday period, has been replaced; at present the Reading Room is open Sunday; and, more important, books must be returned at that time on-week-ends preceding examinations. There is no reason why the extension of this requirement to Widener should work a hardship on any students; certainly it would be of benefit to most...
...students who began practice teaching last week under these arrangements, 4 are undergraduates, the remainder being students regularly enrolled in the Graduate School of Education. Eight of the practice teachers are women, 13 are men. English leads among the subjects taught, claiming eight of the group, three men and five women. In mathematics there are two men and one woman; in science there are three men. Other subjects taught are French, history, and commerce. The practice teachers are distributed this year in the high schools of Arlington, Cambridge, Belmont, Watertown. Newton, Brookline, Somerville, Chelsea, and Medford...
...reported missing or otherwise withdrawn. Undergraduates have been known not to return books at all, and, refusing to replace the book, have enjoyed their library privilege unimpaired. The answer, "I don't understand why the book is missing from the stacks; I put it on the delivery desk a week ago," has cleared more than one guilty undergraduate, and freed him from further embarrassment...