Word: developers
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...first appearance at the Victory Meeting celebrations to introduce astronomer Harlow Shapley, speaking for the natural sciences. Professor Benjamin F. Wright, who has been guiding the crystallization of General Education plans, Thomas L. P. O'Donnell '47, representing student opinion, Professor I. A. Richards, who will help to develop the new educational philosophy in his humanities course next year, and Provost Paul H. Buck, a specialist in the social sciences...
...report to Weld Boathouse frequently to get in shape for the full scale intramural regatta which will be held in the spring. Under the direction of Bert Haines a year-round training policy similar to that used in the years before the war will be set up to develop efficiency in the house crews...
...white pine. The canker matures, in two to four years, into a festering blister, outlined by bile-green and pale yellow rings, exuding small drops of a yellow, poisonous fluid. Wherever this poison touches the bark, black or dark red scars appear. The following year these scars develop into new, white blisters, crammed with spores which the wind carries away for further propagation. The canker grows until the branch, and eventually the tree, sickens and dies...
Blister rust cannot live on pine alone. The spores which leave the pine must find a temporary resting place on the leaves of currant or gooseberry bushes. There they develop as parasitic growths which generate a new and different generation of windborne spores which, in turn, infect the pines. These bushes are the chief points of attack for the conservation army. Once the host is destroyed, blister rust must ultimately...
...hangover cure was not so certain. But most radio executives believed that the industry would be much wiser once it got over its present jitters. They looked for more experimentation in programming, to develop new and cheaper shows within the budget of smaller sponsors. They also expected more network financing of such high art as Toscanini and the NBC Symphony. Whatever developed, U.S. listeners would welcome the change. To many, the only direction left for radio...