Word: subbed
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Four new members have been chosen to complete the Business Board of the Red Book, A. A. Bliss '36, chairman of the Board, announced last night. T. D. Boardman '36 has been appointed sub-chairman, and Ashton Emerson '36, William Gray '36, and A. S. MacDonald '36 have been named members. Any one member who proves a valuable addition will be appointed to the Executive Board...
...advanced work), he enters those which may be called "advanced." They are Chem 3a-b, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, and 13. The undergraduate may be able to include these all in his schedule, but ordinarily he doesn't. He begins to turn to one of the sub-divisions of the field: organic, physical, or analytical chemistry...
...Faculty's recommendation was made on the basis of an elaborate report submitted by a sub-committee of the Committee on Instruction. The principle back of the change of degree requirements was that tutorial work, which has now become in all fields having General Examinations an essential part of the work for the degree, demands much time of the student and that the time thus spent should be at least in slight part compensated for by a reduction in the amount of formal course work demanded. Of course, even with the new rules, a student conscientiously meeting the standards...
...Delano Roosevelt spent his last week as a private citizen in a buzz of conferences and confusion, packing and play, travel and talk. There was little real work to be done before he took over the Presidency. His Cabinet was off his mind (see p. 12). Appointments to the sub-Cabinet and the diplomatic corps could wait until he got into the White House. He had written his Inaugural address. Most new Presidents orate an hour or more; he planned to speak for eight minutes, broadly outlining the "New Deal" and leaving its specifications to the message he would deliver...
Padded Uniforms, The sturdy North Chinese soldier fights (hyperbolic Mr. Lo notwithstanding) neither unarmed nor unclothed. His rifle, his cotton uniform stuffed with wadding and his tough constitution, inured to sub-zero winters, should make him no mean match in freezing Jehol for men from Japan's warm islands. Last week Japan's three-barbed offensive, closing in on Chengteh, the capital of Jehol, from Kailu, Chinchow and Suichung, advanced through snows as much as a foot deep, braved blizzards which reduced visibility at times to nil, plunged on with thermometers so low that Japanese machine guns occasionally...