Word: latters
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...bill to a nicety. There is little that can be said about Math A that does not apply with equal force to Math 2 and for the student who has managed to pass the elementary course without too much trouble, the more advanced should have no especial terrors. The latter is intensive rather than extensive and therefore partakes less of the characteristics of a survey course...
Judge Lescouvé's report was based in turn on a report of a police inspector named Gripois who pointed out Swindler Stavisky's criminal record in 1930 and handed his report to the murdered Judge Prince. The latter quite properly turned it over to Prosecutor Pressard. Last January Prosecutor Pressard denied that he had ever seen the Gripois report. Continued Judge Lescouv...
...bones, assorted dog bones up to the skeleton of a St. Bernard, all more or less decomposed by acid. Soon thereafter Georges Sarret rented M. Poncel's villa L'Hermitage and got into difficulties with another of his underlings, an unfrocked priest named Louis Chambon and the latter's mistress, a Mile Ballandreaux. When M. Poncel returned, found the horrid mess in his garden and the stains on the floor, French detectives at once remembered M. Sarret's garden and its pile of acid-eaten animal bones. The Schmidt sisters were questioned for hours. Finally Catherine...
...Carter, who sold his Aviation Corp. stock [500 shares] after Cord got control, has never been obliged to Mr. Cord, but knows him well. Legend: Silliman Evans. 4th Assistant Postmaster General, is Cord's Washington contact. Fact: Mr. Evans, onetime publicity vice president of American Airways, left the latter after Cord's advent, anticipating his greater glory in Washington. Legend: Eugene L. Vidal. air chief of the Commerce Department is Cord's ally. Fact: Mr. Vidal, when running the independent Ludington Lines, bought Stinson planes from Mr. Cord, later made a confidential airline survey for an advertising...
Towards this latter department at Harvard there is already a growing feeling of antagonism both on the part of the Faculty and the students. The feeling is prevalent that men should not be instructed how to wage war but how to preserve peace and international tranquility without force. By abolishing these military courses from the curriculum the University would set a precedent for other colleges and aid in a practical way in furthering the cause of peace...