Word: l
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...L. Hudson Company in Detroit--second largest department store in the world--has invited seniors and juniors passing through Detroit to stop in for an interview with Herman C. Petzold, Vice-President. Petzold has information on regular careers in merchandising with the firm, as well as summer jobs for students who will not graduate in June...
Harvard Club of Kentucky, Anderson C. Deering, Jr. '34, The Kentucky Trust Company, 5th and Court Place, Louisville; Harvard Club of Memphis, Paul L. Miller, 1331 Sterick Building; Harvard Club of Miami, Floyd M. Sathre '26, 1456 Marseille...
Thanking the scientists for their work, Colonel L. Champeny stated that their work "although seemingly small in scope had played a great part in assuring the success of larger overall projects...
Paul D. Bartlett '31, professor of Chemistry; Garrett Birkhoff '32, professor of Mathematics; Shin Lu Chang, assistant professor of Sanitary Biology; Cocil K. Drinker. professor of Physiology; Wendell H. Furry, associate professor of Physics; James L. Gamble '10, professor of Pediatrics; Harry L. Hansen '37, associate professor of Business Administration; John N. Hobstter, assistant professor of Engineering Science; Roland B. Holt, assistant professor of Physics; Edwin C. Kemble '17, professor of Physics; Eugene M. Landis, George Higgins Professor of Physiology; Harry R. Mimno '28, Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics; J. Howard Mueller, Charles Wilder Professor of Bacteriology and Immunology...
...employ the same rather soggy prose, or because the editors have pressed the essays into one stylistic mold, most of them read as if written by one man: a learned but conventional professor. (One happy exception: the chapter on "American Language," in which the gay, strong hand of H. L. Mencken quickly shows itself.) What a reader misses here is what he finds in Vernon Louis Parrington's Main Currents in American Thought: one mind in command of a subject, sometimes pulling a boner but more often arousing excitement and curiosity, and always leaving on the reader the sharp...