Word: crediters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...pound center from Belmont now has 29 points to his credit for the 1967-68 season and is tied for fourth place on the all-time list...
...school should be concerned with the issues of the day." Dershowitz had just finished giving the first class in a brand-new, ten-week Harvard course entitled "The Role of the Law and the Lawyer in the Viet Nam Conflict." It has no exam or grades, offers no credit, and involves a good deal of reading over and above the students' already heavy regular work load. But it has a record enrollment of more than 400-one-quarter of the student body-and is one of the most popular courses in the 150-year history of the school...
...schools have also encouraged students to dig into the issues raised by Viet Nam. Last week a student-faculty committee at U.C.L.A. Law School decided to try to start a Viet Nam-and-the-law course in the fall. If approved by the faculty, it will be given for credit. New York University Law School started a seminar on the subject for third-year men this semester. Students have also been probing Viet Nam on their own. The most extensive effort so far is a new book, Law and Viet Nam, by two 1967 Yale Law graduates, Roger Hull...
...offering market courses for years, but the number and variety are burgeoning. For the teaching broker, the rewards can be considerable. Firms have found that 35% to 40% of their students sign up for accounts. In Cincinnati, Thomas Shuff of Hayden, Stone Inc., has started an eight-week, non-credit course on investments at the city university. Last week, at the first session, he was pleasantly surprised to find his classroom packed with 200 possible accounts. Even unions, with big pension funds and increasingly affluent members, are eager to learn about the market. Reynolds was recently asked...
...section man and one of his students have set up a group of non-credit seminars to "counter and expand" what is presently taught...