Word: asterisked
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...total of 163 ballots cast for the candidates, three were elected. The results are as follows, with an asterisk beside the names of the winners: *Edward S. Josephson '36 111 *Sigmund Werner '36 80 *Forrest T. Foss '37 67 Irving Rosenbloom...
...asterisk after the number of the Course indicates that undergraduates must get the written consent of the instructor in order to elect it. ANTHROPOLOGY 2 Thurs. 11-1 Peabody Mus. 3b Thurs. at 10 Peabody Mus. ASTRONOMY 3 Thurs. at 11 Astron. Lab. BIOLOGY A Thurs. at 10 Geol. Lect. Rm. 17 Thurs. at 12 Gray Herbarium 21 Thurs. at 9 Geol. Lect. Rm. 23 Thurs. at 9 Biol. Lab. Lect. Rm. 31 Thurs. at 10 Biol. Lab. A-115 34* Thurs. at 2 Biol. Lab. A-115 40a* Consult Professor Upton 40b* Consult Professor Upton 40c* Consult Professor Upton...
...entitled "Birth Controllers on Parade" in TIME for Jan. 29, I wish to take exception to an insinuation wholly unjustifiable. You state that Mrs. Hepburn "started the show" (a good description of the hearing before the Judiciary Committee) by insisting "We are not connected with any commercial interest*." That asterisk calls attention to your footnote which states that contraceptives were on exhibit in a room at the Mayflower Hotel during the Birth Control Conference in Washington held at the Mayflower. The inference is unmistakable. Was it intended? Perhaps you do not know that admission to the exhibit was by card...
...asterisk after the number of the course indicates that undergraduates must obtain the written consent of the Instructor...
TIME footnotes are appended, whenever possible, to ends of paragraphs, or at least ends of sentences, so that they can be read at natural breaks or pauses in the story, like asides in a play. The recommended procedure is to read each footnote as its asterisk, dagger or double asterisk appears. Any able reading eye should then be able to find its way back to the point of digression in the main text. Less nimble eyes can be aided by staking out the point of digression with forefinger or pencil. Readers too engrossed by the main discourse to break...