Word: offered
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Sirs: Under caption of Medicine in TIME of Feb. 15, P-67, you give the impression that Kentucky does not offer free laboratory service for the determination of syphilis. Having labored diligently (I hope) for eight hours a day to get an average of 300 Wassermanns ready daily at the Public Service Laboratories in Lexington, I feel your article must be erroneous or have another interpretation not related to the above-mentioned disease...
...docked. How much money could be squeezed out of Germany if the rest of the bondholders got tough is problematical. Britain's simple threat of appropriating German trade balances for the benefit of its citizens holding German bonds brought quick results in the form of a 4% scrip offer, as against the 3% offered U. S. bondholders in the issue registered last week. German trade with Britain yields a favorable balance, which the Reich desperately needs, whereas its balance with the U. S. has been unfavorable to Germany, which could retaliate against bondholders who attached German balances...
...hoped that the Glee Club which is the bulwark of the performance will get the good house it deserves. Incidentally, there are still some seats available for the remaining quarter of the Symphony season at a very low rate. These seats include subscription privileges for next year and certainly offer an unusual opportunity to begin the very worthwhile "Symphony habit". Inquiries should be made at Symphony Hall in Boston...
...natural candor matching that of the new Queen. About six years after his marriage he said as Duke of York, "My chief claim to fame seems to be that I am the father of Princess Elizabeth." To a pushing cinemagnate who managed to buttonhole the Duke and make an offer as fabulous as it was vulgar, the present King quickly replied with perfect truth, "You can tell your firm that I make my own films of my daughters." Newsreel companies never know when he will call up to borrow a $45,000 sound camera, truck and delighted, grinning crew...
...reforms in the Chicago Law School's curriculum as outlined by Dean Harry Augustus Bigelow will rearrange the traditional pattern of U. S. legal education. Chicago Law next autumn will offer a four-year course which takes the emphasis away from the casebook method introduced some 65 years ago by Harvard's late great Christopher Columbus Langdell. The approved U. S. law course lasts three years. Chicago's students will still study cases, but besides such standbys as torts, contracts, property and procedure, the new Chicago plan calls for courses integrating with the law materials of economics...