Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Correspondents wondered why Visitor Stassen had not mentioned other hardship cases. Asked the Philadelphia Bulletin's blunt Carl McArdle: "Governor, are you on the Herald Tribune payroll?" No, Stassen grinned, he had just happened to run into Geoffrey Parsons Jr., editor of the Paris edition, who had told him about the Trib's troubles...
...eligible to enter. Two and five-minute handicaps, representing approximately half and full mile head starts, will be awarded cyclists on the basis of equipment and proven ability. Only pure racing bicycles, fenderless, aerodynamically efficient machines, will start from scratch. Entrants should sign up on the Outing Club bulletin board in Sover...
...Harvard Alumni Bulletin, after supporting the activities center, grew more cautious, and in a recent article on war memorial plans referred to it only as "the pet project of the Harvard Crimson." The absence of an undergraduate voice on the Saltonstall Committee indicated to many that the activities center had been dropped from the list of likely possibilities...
...edict appeared recently on one of the House bulletin boards declaring that the dining hall of that House would no longer be available, with certain exceptions, to College-wide extracurricular activities for purposes of ticket-selling, poll-taking, or any other form of solicitation. Investigation disclosed that the policy on this problem varied considerably from House to House, but that the House Masters are thinking of forming a joint policy that would apply in all dining halls. Should the Masters adopt the drastic Lowell House formula, every one of the College's threescore extracurricular organizations would be placed under...
Actually, wrote Morton (in the April Atlantic Monthly Bulletin, a chatty paper he sends to 4,000 editors, contributors and Atlantic friends), "the police, who have been sitting around in a state of indifference to overtime parking, burglaries, reefer peddlers, have finally been obliged to carry on a little simulation of activity . . . [and] such a description of Congressional procedures is almost a case for the postal authorities. As for Mayor Himmelfarber, he has never moved swiftly since crossing the 250-pound mark and to do so would lay him up with a thrombosis in short order...