W.E.A.
The W.E.A. will open its session on April 2 and 3 with two short courses of four lectures each. The first course will consist of a series of lectures on aspects of -modern art and its relation to the community. The second course will take the form of round-table discussions between representatives of the business community, the farmers, the Labour Movement, the Communist Party, and the economist on the subject. ‘ New Zealand as it Might Be.’ It was once remarked that opinions and convictions can have value only in so far as they are the subject of constant adjustment and modification as a result of testing them out against the opinion and experience of others. This second course affords that opportunity, not only to those who are to exchange views in the friendly informal discussion round the table each night, but also to pH those in the community who have views, and who are sufficiently alive to wisli io nndersta ml why others bold opinions different from iheir own.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19350330.2.177
Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 21992, 30 March 1935, Page 26
Word Count
170W.E.A. Evening Star, Issue 21992, 30 March 1935, Page 26
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