Word: staffs
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...H.A.A.'s biggest handicaps last fall was an insufficient number of trained personnel to handle the rush business that preceded a big game. And no announcement has been made of a contemplated increase in the office staff. Before each game the H.A.A, will have to exchange the application slip of each student for a ticket, plus handling turn-ins and requests for extra seats. It is easy to imagine that it will be doing a land office business. Unless there is a large staff on hand, the Quincy Street Emporium may be faced with the same un-ending lines that...
...produce a varied and expertly-presented program for the music-lover. It's a long haul from Cambridge, taking even the most inspired driver about four hours, but the Cambridge-worn student could hardly find a better place to forget the heat than here where Dr. Koussevitzky and his staff have accomplished a musical miracle for America's youth...
...graduate of Stanford University and Harvard Medical School, Dr. Eaton has taught at the Yale and Washington University Schools of Medicine and has been a member of the staff of the international Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation. He has made many valuable contributions to the field of Immunology...
...billion national debt. Railway rolling stock will probably remain on that side of the border where it stands on independence day. (The Moslem League accused the Hindu-controlled Government of switching brand-new American locomotives from Pakistan areas to Delhi, substituting old, burnt-out engines.) The 40,000 staff members of New Delhi's vast imperial Secretariat were busy last week counting typewriters and almirahs (cabinets), carpets and inkpots. Typists worked four hours a day overtime copying files, so that each of the two new Governments would have a set. Moslems and Hindus accused each other of stealing files...
...striker on the picket line think about? Orrin Cromwell Evans thought about comic strips. Evans was one of the Newspaper Guildsmen whose strike against J. David Stern's Philadelphia Record ended in the Record's collapse (TIME, Feb. 10). He was the only Negro reporter on the staff. As he walked the picket line, he thought hard about a complaint frequently heard among his people: Negroes are usually ridiculed and their way of life distorted in comics drawn by white...