Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...schedule printed below is not official. Students will be held responsible for meeting examination appointments in accordance with the official schedule posted on bulletin boards of College buildings. Failure to meet examination appointments will not be excused on the basis of deviation between official and unofficial printed schedules. All students are advised to examine official schedules before the examination period begins. A. C. Hanford, Dean...
...schedule printed below is not official. Students will be held responsible for meeting examination appointments in accordance with the official schedule posted on bulletin boards of College buildings. Failure to meet examination appointments will not be excused on the basis of deviation between official and unofficial printed schedules. All students are advised to examine official schedules before the examination period begins. A. C. Hanford, Dean...
...Little about his behavior suggested that he was born of gentlefolk in New York 49 years ago properly educated in New Jersey. After he had been hired, fired, rehired on various San Francisco newspapers, the skyrocket of Jack Neylan's career was touched off in 1910 when the Bulletin assigned him to cover Hiram Johnson's campaign for Governor on the new Progressive ticket. Governor-elect Johnson took him to Sacramento as chairman of the new State Board of Control, for which Neylan had drafted the plan. Chairman Neylan's achievements transcended all legal limitations...
Resolution No, 5: Alter the directorate to include three directors, one each from cities up to 15,000, 50,000, 75,000 population. Publisher Robert McLean of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin: "Better discussed by a quiet, thoughtful group of men. Let it be put up to the board of directors." Vote: Referred to the directors. Lawyer Neylan: "Will the directors handle the voting as was done today?" Noyes, snappishly: "Maybe. Can't tell." Neylan: "Twice this afternoon you have disfranchised 900 members of the Associated Press by not permitting their proxies to be voted." Neylan, later: "We always lose...
...congratulations of shipowners and bankers with the statement that he was not fighting for them. When he said, "My heart bleeds for the Newspaper Guild," he really meant that he would like to see newspaper reporters get a better deal. But as Hearst's lawyer in the Call-Bulletin case, he considered the Guild a menace, fought it to a standstill, drove it Leftward toward trade unionism (TIME. Dec. 24). Twitted for defending bankers thrice in two years he explains: "The underdog needs friends. The bankers are so friendless now, even the politicians have courage to attack them...