Word: particularities
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...selection of professors and tutors in the current issue of the Critic. Considered as whole, the article is important in that it takes up many problems whose solutions should be forged on the anvil of debate. The question of a tutor's qualifications, however, is one which deserves particular consideration...
...Undergraduate instruction in the Engineering School will be abolished. A Division of Engineering Science in Harvard College will offer elementary and advanced instruction in the Engin- cering Sciences with particular reference to mechanical engineering in the broader sense. Advanced instruction will be of such character that the elementary instruction offered will constitute an adequate preparation for it. Undergraduates intending to concentrate in this field will be subject to the entrance requirements established by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences for admission to the College, so long as such requirements are not of a character to exclude graduates of public high...
...hard to disagree with a great many of the statements in Mr. Nittle's communication printed in last Saturday's CRIMSON. One statement in particular, however, irked me because of its falsification of the context of my communication printed in last Friday's CRIMSON. He states: ". . . attempt to apply this sacred idea of eternal Truth in defense of bankers and such . . ." Was not the whole point in my letter that the New Deal is in part an attempt to give Big Business an even greater opportunity to dominate the country...
...combined experiences of many underwriters. Thus, U. S. rates for student pilots are almost uniformly near $35; for experienced non-commercial pilots. $16 to $20. Those rates take into consideration all possible combinations of risks. Lloyd's rates, on the other hand, vary with the judgment of the particular underwriter who takes the case, but are rarely...
...candidate from each is nominated for the Harvard Prize Scholarship; by the headmaster in "recognition of scholastic attainment and intellectual promise". The amount of the award in each case varies in accordance with the financial need of the particular student. If there is no financial need, the student receives only a nominal sum as a prize. If he requires assistance, the stipend is increased accordingly...