Word: cues
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Council plans to organize dances, parties and freshman trips, conduct CHUL and CUE elections later this month, and compile a guide to choosing Houses in the spring, Mills said...
Most professors still confine themselves to traditional, innocuous strategies ?hosting early-fall beer parties, allowing students to shop around for courses before committing themselves. But many choose a more direct pitch. Taking a cue from TV executives, the University of Montana's history department made a three-credit hit out of "Roots: American Genealogy and Immigration"?a success story they hope to duplicate with another made-for-college spinoff: a three-credit course covering Nazi Germany. "We capitalized blatantly on Roots," confesses Montana History Chairman Dr. Harry Fritz. "Now we are trying to capitalize on the Holocaust...
...Epps said, the members of the Student Assembly could ask the University to appoint a special review committee to consider different options for student government reform. The committee would be similar to the Fainsod Committee that established the student-faculty advisory committees--mainly CHUL, the Committee on Undergraduate Education (CUE) and the Committee on Rights and Responsibilities (CRR)--in the wake of the campus unrest...
Maxine Pfeffer '81, a member of the Committee on Undergraduate Education (CUE) and enterprising secretary of the now-defunct convention, said the Student Assembly might start off working on a recent student proposal to establish a counselling system whereby upperclassmen would advise freshmen on an individual basis. "It's called 'Students Helping Students,'" Pfeffer said. "That program might be the first run by the Student Assembly. Right now, it's run through the Freshman Dean's Office." Pfeffer said that before the assembly elections there will be a meeting held--open to anyone interested--to set the ground rules...
...have given up cigarettes clutched momentarily at the hint that smoking might be safe after all and their valiant struggle was unnecessary. The Tobacco Institute, lobby for the industry, declared, "We could not have written it [Carter's statement] better than that." And almost as if on cue, Gio Batta Gori, a high official of the Government-financed National Cancer Institute, announced a short-term study showing that some of the new cigarettes were so low in toxins that they could be smoked in "tolerable" numbers without appreciable bad effects on average smokers...