Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...comprehensive report submitted recently to the Executive Board of the Sophomore class, the 1929 Red Book Committee has given an analysis of the system by which it was enabled to issue the largest, most complete, and most profitable Red Book in the history of the publication. This report is primarily for the benefit of the 1930 Red Book Committee and it will be turned over to its chairman by the 1929 class officers as soon as he is appointed...
...plan itself is a combination of student marking of courses, of a confidential guide, and of a student report of the type which has been prepared at Dartmouth, Vassar, Harvard, and several other colleges and universities. Its only new industrial feature is the provision for student review of each department, in addition to courses. Its significance lies first, in its scope, minute organization and correlation, and second, in the official sanctity with which it has been blessed...
...Senator from Michigan. They have been at swords' points ever since 1924 when Senator Couzens expressed hearty disapproval of Secretary Mellon's tax reduction program. A year later, Senator Couzens began poking into the affairs of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, made public a report, charged the Treasury Department with laxity in collecting certain income taxes. Secretary Mellon had a lusty counterattack ready, informed Mr. Couzens that he still owed the U. S. Government $10,909,588.08 in taxes on the Ford stock which he sold in 1919. For the last two years, Secretary Mellon and his colleagues...
...report for 1925-26 President Lowell has emphasized a point which not many years ago would have been considered one of heresy but which now, due to change in conditions, is coming to hold an ever-increasing place in the minds of modern educators: that is to say, the restriction of education. "People engaged in public instruction are inclined to go too far in thinking that everyone should be encouraged to pursue his schooling to the furthest possible stage," writes the President, and thereby comments and takes a definite view on a problem which faces not only Harvard, but also...
...will only serve to create what President Lowell calls "sad misfits of ill-directed ambition." But there is a system, or rather an order of things, which has been gradually evolving and which may help to make the situation less difficult and this panacea receives discussion in this same report...