Word: bulletin
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Animal Energy. Under the family's rigorous current-events course. Teddy studied newspaper clippings posted on a bulletin board by his mother, answered her questions at lunch. He laboriously compiled a daily diary that was regularly checked by his parents ("You had to use words you could spell''), and he listened, from the distance of the separate table reserved for the family's small fry, as his big brothers and father staged their free-for-all arguments at dinner about national and world affairs. Nonetheless, Teddy made himself felt. Says Jean: "Even as a child...
...proposal. But that apparently was not enough to satisfy the Soviet Premier. Last week the full 14,000 words of Khrushchev's speech appeared in two-and three-page display ads in the New York Herald Tribune, Kansas City Star, Hearst's San Francisco News-Call Bulletin, the Manchester Guardian, Montreal Star, Ottawa Journal and Winnipeg Free Press. Total cost to the Soviet government: $30,603. The Soviets, in following Madison Avenue's ways, still had some lessons to learn: the ads were unrelievedly grey in eye-straining type...
Students are urged to sign up as soon as possible at Matthews Hall 4 and then to check the bulletin board outside Room 1 in Matthews for final information about the trip...
...annual profit, under the same management they net not $200,000 a year but $500,000. Hearst is presently testing this formula in San Francisco, where his morning paper, the Examiner, last June bought out Scripps-Howard's interest in the city's only evening paper, the News-Call Bulletin...
...money is flowing into U.S. universities and university-related laboratories at the rate of about $1 billion a year-roughly one-quarter of their total income. One beneficial result is the "new life" stirring in university laboratories, says Harvard's President Nathan M. Pusey in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin. What worries Pusey (and other educators) is the danger of federal interference. Government agencies, warns Harvard's chief, show "an increasing desire to say how things are to be done in laboratories, and who may or may not appear in them...