Word: plans
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...experimental plan of House dining hall privileges for Freshmen agreed to by the Masters in the spring of 1936 will be continued this year beginning Thursday, October 21. Freshmen who take their meals regularly at the Union will be allowed to take not more than one meal per week as the guest of an upperclassmen in any of the Houses, with the understanding that the meal will be charged against the Freshman's account at the Union. The upperclassman who is the Freshman's host must countersign the inter-House eating slip. The privilege will not apply on the occasions...
...official statement issued from University Hall yesterday, Dean Hanford announces and explains the continuation of the House dining privilege plan for Freshmen...
...instituted a year and a half ago the plan seeks to give the Yardling an early knowledge of the Houses through allowing him to eat meals in the upperclass dormitories at no extra expense...
...week that had been estimated would be necessary. His sternness was also apparent in the first skirmish of the trial, when Prosecutor Hammond Edward Chaffetz, 30, who has been with the Department of Justice since graduation from Harvard Law School seven years ago, tried to forestall the obvious plan of the defense to shoulder all blame on the New Deal. Prosecutor Chaffetz asked Judge Stone to forbid the defense to assert that its practices had Government approval unless they could produce letters from President Roosevelt or Secretary of the Interior Ickes to substantiate the assertion...
Under SEC regulation it often takes: six months to launch a new capital issue, for the plan must be registered with the SEC to get approval for sale. This caused little trouble so long as stock prices were going up. Since prices have been falling there has been utmost confusion. Perfect example was an issue of $44,000,000 offered by Pure Oil Co. and underwritten by 42 firms headed by Edward B. Smith & Co. The new $100 preferred stock was made convertible into four and one-half shares of authorized common, thus evaluating the common at $22.22 per share...