Word: limiteds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...offered after replacing faculty vacancies. At present, the department has attempted to solve the problem by assigning different types of work to concentrators and non-concentrators in such courses as "The Art of Bach." Larger institutions are able to offer wholly separate history courses of varying technicality, but the limit on the number of permanent appointees here prohibits that arrangement...
...after pooling all information concerning their respective armament and undertaking not to increase it, the U.S., the U.S.S.R. and Red China would agree to limit their armed forces to 1,500,000 men each, Britain and France to 650,000 men each. (These are the figures originally proposed by Britain, against Malik's previous stubborn insistence on one-third reduction all around, a proposal that favored the big armies of Russia and Red China.) In the first stage, nuclear nations would promise not to use nuclear weapons unless the Security Council decided they were acting "in defense against aggression...
NATIONAL DEBT LIMIT will have to be pushed up this year, possibly to $285 billion, $4 billion higher than the current statutory limit, which expires June 30. At current rates of spending, the debt will fall between $281 and $285 billion by the end of the year. President Eisenhower will probably ask Congress to boost the limit by the end of this month. But this time, he will merely set forth anticipated income, outgo and deficit, leave it up to Congress to work out its own ceiling...
...effort to remedy the unequal distribution of previous years, the Housemasters placed no limit on the number of freshmen who could be accepted into the House of their first choice. The Masters this year "bartered" among themselves in order to produce an equal distribution according to rank group, field of concentration, and extra-curricular activities...
David F. Hawkins '56 took the first final examination of the year at the Geographic Institute last night. All students in English Q were required to attend the exam, in tuxedos, but the time limit was closer to 15 minutes than three hours. Other members of the University, except proctors, were welcome, without tuxedos. Seven other speakers displayed their rhetorical skill, poise, and sophistication before English N. Frederick C. Packard, associate professor of Public Speaking, and a tape recorder. For the rest of the College, finals will not start for another two weeks, until Wednesday, May 25. They will continue...