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Page 29 text:
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ikete Wa.5 CONFERENCE by Dr. Robert R. Brooks, dean of Williams College and an expert in the field of labor relations; and William Muehl, youngest member of the faculty at the Yale Divinity School. An outstanding feature of the entire con- ference was the maintenance of the discus- sion on a plane of the practical, for as it has so often been stressed, it is of far greater importance in the light of present day affairs to consider the how rather than the why of world harmony. ' Where h Christianity in Bit
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Page 28 text:
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±)n Match. CULTURE D:J Yon Mcjn to Say: The responsibility for world harmony, the general theme of the 1947 Culture Con- ference, was the topic around which three panels of discussion revolved. On Saturday morning, March 8, President Stratton de- livered an opening address which was fol- lowed by the keynote speech of Dr. David L. Thomson of McGill University. Dr. Thomson served as moderator for all of the sessions. Edgar A. Mowrer, syndicated columnist and an expert on international affairs, and Charles W. Lightbody, historian, writer, and lecturer, each presented pre- pared talks. After these had been delivered, the audience and panel members participated in a debate of the issues brought forth in the speeches. The second of the round table discussions began on Saturday afternoon with speeches by Leon Gay. the treasurer of Gay Brothers Company in Cavendish, Vermont; W. I. Let There Be l : ru trjtron Xewstetter, dean of the School of Applied Social Science at the University of Pitts- burgh; and G. Holmes Perkins, a member of the faculty of Harvard College, and an expert on regional planning and housing. An informal reception was held in Forest Hall on Saturday evening. To this gathering stu- dents were invited to meet and ask ques- tions of the speakers. Preceded by a dinner in Forest Hall for all of the participants, the concluding panel met on Sunday afternoon and heard talks
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Page 30 text:
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une. litouqht Af:cr the Exercises The one hundred and forty-sixth com- mencement of Middlebury College was held on June 17, 1946, in Mead Memorial Chapel. Opening with a processional and invocation bv Reverend Jenkins, the graduation exer- Timc Out for Rewards
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