Word: extended
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Emmons is now waiting to hear from Government quarters exactly what quota of men his course will be permitted to train this semester. Permission has already been granted to Harvard to extend the training to two students from Pan American countries, and selection of these men is now under way. It is still possible, of course, that with the war emergency, the Government will cease civilian training and place all pilot instruction in the hands of the Army and Navy...
Editor Herzberg's insulters extend in time from Job to Dorothy Parker, are grouped under such headings as Kings and Presidents, Scarified Statesmen; Scorched Politicos; Spite and Wit Among the Great; Whistlerisms; Sarcasm by Mail, Wire, and Cable. Some of the best...
...Juniors and Seniors (that is, courses for which attendance reports are not regularly required during term time) will not be reported to the Dean's office. The purpose of this policy is not to encourage Juniors and Seniors or other men not on the Dean's List to extend the Christmas recess and to get away from Cambridge, but rather to permit greater freedom to the student in arranging his work while in Cambridge and also to avoid a complicated system of taking attendance in advanced courses at the time of vacations. The plan is in keeping with the recent...
...attention is called to the fact that the experiment above mentioned does not apply to Sophomores or to Freshmen, including both new and dropped Freshmen, because attendance is regularly reported in practically all of the courses taken by them. Freshmen and Sophomores not on the Dean's List who extend the Christmas recess will be subject to disciplinary action as in the past. Alumni the necessary 34 points...
...getting ready to extend the principles of convoys to land-to the Burma Road? Just as German attacks on sea convoys were "piracy," would Japanese attacks on land convoys become "banditry"? This would be a very tough gambit, but the Axis had taught the democracies a thing or two about how to play world chess...