Word: branch
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Haverford's first class was composed of 21 young Quakers studying classics and higher mathematics under the sponsorship of the orthodox branch of the Society...
When Col. Clarence Marshall Young resigned last spring as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Aeronautics the new Administration abolished his job. His work was divided among five men under Assistant Secretary of Commerce Ewing Y. Mitchell who admittedly knows nothing about aviation. Sooner or later the Aeronautics Branch had to have a head man, and no appointive job at the Capital was subject to fiercer competition. Leading candidates were Rex Martin, Wartime flyer, onetime secretary to Illinois' Representative Keller; Major J. Carroll Cone, Wartime flyer, good friend and campaign helper of Arkansas' Senator Robinson; and Eugene L. Vidal...
...sake of economy (the Branch's budget was cut from $7,600,000 to $5,200,000) airway radio beacons will not be operated on clear days except on request. For several months airway beacon lights have been turned off between flight schedules, to save money. Henceforth they will burn through the night. Of the Branch's 60 planes for official use, 14 have been put in dead storage. Director Vidal travels not in the handsome Ford tri-motor NSt used by Col. Young, but in a small Stinson which he flies himself...
...Angeles branch of the University of California (7,000 students) for the first time introduced graduate work, limited however by lack of funds. The nearby University of Southern California opened a new School of Research, a branch of its Graduate School. Centred mainly in U. S. C.'s handsome new Edward Laurence Doheny Junior Memorial Library, it will offer 105 courses in all branches of knowledge. Last week about 100 Ph.D.-seekers enrolled, were characterized by Dean Rockwell Dennis Hunt as not only "masters in some known field of art or science but discoverers and creators as well...
...professorial branch of Harvard's personnel has long been inclined to regard newspaper publicity not only as vulgar, stupid, and crass, but, so one may conclude from the foregoing, as annoyingly pertinent. It was with poorly concealed intent to touch this inner spring that the CRIMSON inaugurated it's Harvard Portraits. There seems to have been some, misunderstanding: in the course of the past week Professors Burkhard and Morison have been espied, carrying large wads of CRIMSONS under their arms...