Word: seniorities
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...much under Navy's hat. (Says Third Naval District Press Relations Officer Lieut. Commander John T. Tuthill Jr.: "I don't know there is such a school.") Students, about 50 thus far, are Manhattan newsmen who will later receive Naval Reserve commissions ranging from ensign to lieutenant senior grade (pay and allowance: $2,199 to $3,158). Carefully checked by FBI, Navy's censors-to-be study naval regulations, hear lectures by naval intelligence officers, learn to decipher codes. Practice codes are mostly old spy communiques. Example: a harmless-looking news dispatch which dates...
...William J. Bingham '16, Director of Athletics, will result in an automatic major letter for men who have competed against Yale for two years, whether they placed or not, and also for men who, having been on the squad for three years, have competed against Yale in their Senior year...
...system had been allowed to continue, there would be no Senior lettermen this year. Members of last year's Varsity who will receive retroactive big H's for their work are captain-elect Dick Harris, Art Bosworth, Max Kraus, and Lonnie Stowell. The last three have graduated...
Chub Peabody also took his old place at left guard, but the center of the Crimson forward wall is still wide open. Sophomore Mark Beobe and Senior Bill LaCroix saw action on teams A and B as Burgy Ayres still restricted himself to conditioning work with trainer Jimmy Cox and "Swede" Anderson, and Johnny Page took...
Only the additional cost of grading, a hurdle which should not prove insurmountable to economists conversant with Keynesian rabbit-out-of-the-hat economics, has been advanced against the proposal. Few students in Ec 41 have failed to feel that the experience of a dress rehearsal for the Senior thesis was worth while. Their sole complaint has been that the extra work was an unfair burden to impose on only part of the Juniors busy with review for divisionals. And there is the further gain that under the proposed plan not even sine cum laude candidates can slip...