Word: parents
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...principal rules for the conduct of the pupil are to be inscribed. Establish a personal record for every pupil. . . . . Every five days the chief instructor of a class will examine the memorandum, will mark cases of absence and tardiness in it, and will demand the signature of the parent under all remarks of the instructor. . . . Underlying the ruling on the conduct of the pupils is to be placed a strict and conscientious application of discipline. ... In the personal record there will be entered for the entire duration of his studies the marks of the pupil for every quarter, his prizes...
...liquidated, its readership swallowed by Pictorial Review, to give that Hearst property a whacking monthly circulation of over 3,000,000.* April issue now in the hands of the printers will be the last of Delineator as such. The pattern service of Butterick Co., Delineator's publishing parent, will continue separately. No other Delineator department will survive...
...have already shown, or rather suggested, Harvard has a history of which all Americans may be proud, and is an institution which reflects the highest credit on its parent state. It is not a very grand place when compared with Oxford or Cambridge, but then it is not fair to compare them. In the first place America is a young country; in the second place Harvard is not American in a large sense. Setting politics aside, America has no national institutions; it is a collection of proviness, each with museums, colleges, public libraries, and other institutions of its own. There...
...more productive. At Bay City, Mich., 18 mi. from Midland on Lake Huron, Dow now makes a magnesium alloy that is one-third lighter than aluminum and good for airplane and machinery parts. At Marquette, Mich., on Lake Superior, a subsidiary called Cliffs Dow Chemical Co., in which the parent company has a 60% interest, makes charcoal, combustible gases and acids from wood. Near Wilmington, N. C., on the Atlantic Ocean, a big plant extracts bromine from the sea, manufactures ethylene dibromide for use in antiknock gasolines. Partner on a 50-50 basis in this venture is Ethyl Gasoline Corp...
...precisely what the saving is. To circumvent this legal and accounting problem U. S. Rubber Co. last week announced a novel method of meeting the Robinson-Patman Act. After the turn of the year a new subsidiary called U. S. Tire Dealers Mutual Co. will purchase tires from the parent company on an equal footing with big buyers like motor-makers and mail-order houses. Mutual will handle all distribution, passing on the profits, if any, to its dealers. Thus while the dealers will still have to pay more for their tires than volume customers, the difference will be exactly...