Word: cite
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Bull and Bear members feel their organization fills a definite gap in the Law School curriculum. They cite the fact that even Law School courses on corporations and business are taught from the legal angle and do not provide practical business knowledge. And although many students are only studying law as a background for a business career, courses across the river at the Business School are open only to third-year...
...cite these members of the bureaucracy, because their roles are significant on an organization where officers come and go like French cabinets. Two others deserving mention are Mrs. Anna S. Hoke, who did about everything that could be done on the paper as secretary from 1938 to 1946, and Miss Marie Beaupre, Radcliffe '46, the CRIMSON bookkeeper for the past six years...
...they wish to acknowledge that the greatly overcrowded, understaffed hospitals have become agencies of hope by the addition, under Dever's administration, of six thousand new hospital beds, increased and more efficient personnel and the introduction of the best modern medical facilities and methods. They are reluctant to cite these words of former Mental Health Commissioner Dr. Clifton T. Perkins--(incidentally a Republican)-- "Governor Dever did more in one year in the field of mental health than other governors in a hundred years...
...Their defense was to cite the party's civil rights plank which since 1932 has contained only empty promises," he began. "This is an excellent example of the intellectual dishonesty with which the HLU Continually insults the intelligence of the Harvard community," Schroeder added...
...interest of party unity, Ike and Taft have emphasized their areas of agreement and glossed over their difference. However, neither has attempted ta change his stand to appease the other, except possibly for Ike's reversal on UMT. The charge of "surrender" is a standard political device. . . Democrats cite Ike's stand on the Taft-Hartley law; he recommended that is be amended where necessary, but that its many sound principles be preserved. . . . Stevenson, on the other hand, has reversed his stand and demanded complete repeal of the law, without suggesting what he would put in its place...