Word: crediters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...honor of sharing the CRIMSON'S editorial page the other day. Although I definitely appreciated being called a funny satirist, I'm afraid I came off in a very bad light by comparison. Thank you Major Folk for showing us why it was necessary to withdraw academic credit from ROTC! Kenneth L. Tigar '64 Tutor in German
...Social Relations Department yesterday decided to give academic credit to an "activist" section of Social Relations 149: "Radical Perspectives of Social Change...
...rapidly growing. In 1967, it earned $19 million on $130-million-worth of premiums, largely by tapping a part of the market that most other insurers have overlooked. Stone developed the low-cost Little Giant health and accident policies that are sold without a medical examination or credit check, mostly to shopkeepers and employees of firms without disability income plans. For a $3 annual premium, the policy pays disability benefits of $15 a week for 15 weeks; most customers buy two or more policies. Sales are also brisk for Combined's Little Giant life policy, which...
...Typist is a real live one-acter, unlike the other skits. It alone demands sobriety for appreciation. At fifteen, when I first saw the play, it seemed pretty boring just to have two typists sitting on stage talking. But to the credit of Miss Austin and her cast, things livened up for me second time around, although a judicious speed-up of pacing still could have helped the production...
...desperate of cases, a producer will bring in additional writers to "doctor" or, hopefully, save the show. Alexander Cohen, Dear World's producer, used his wife, Hildy Parks, and another librettist, Joe Masteroff (who wrote Cabaret) to fix up his production. Neither of these show doctors will receive program credit for their work, but they will get a flat sum of money, and, if their rewriting is substantial, perhaps a percentage royalty...