Word: submitting
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Study cards and a pamphlet on choosing a field will be sent to the Freshmen before April 10. The choice of the field must be made before April 14, at which time each Freshman should submit a study card for next year, and a plan for his whole college course. This plan should indicate what courses he intends to take to satisfy the requirements for concentration and distribution...
Today Col. Young enjoys enormous popularity in the industry and practically universal respect. Utterly conscientious in administering his job, he is incapable of political ballplaying. Many a manufacturer school director or transport operator has learned that "The Chief" may submit to being called by his first name, but is quick to meet each & every request for an easy or lax interpretation of Government rules with: "The Air Commerce Act says...
...Such a proposal is embodied in a bill introduced by Senator Sam Gilbert Bratton of New Mexico. Instead of the present Department of Commerce certificate of authority, indicating only fitness to operate, it would require every airline to obtain a certificate of necessity & convenience from the I. C. C., submit to regulation of rates, schedules and finance like the railroads. Says Col. Young of the proposal: "Premature. . . . The industry is too young to be 'frozen' by excessive restrictions...
This "Answer to Pacifists," as the editorial names the survey, is bolstered by false and prejudiced reasoning. Those who choose military training or submit to it can hardly be its most open-minded judges. If the principle of giving military instruction in liberal arts colleges is sound, that principle should be extended. If training to become a soldier is college education, then training to become any sort of uniformed public servant is college education, and courses in Letter Carrying, Fire Fighting, Dog Catching, and Street Cleaning, all have their proper place in the curriculum...
...drastic, from 16 to 12. Classes during the first three years of college may be required with justice, the first year for distribution, the second and third for concentration. Beyond that, there might be no requirements is courses, only a thorough and comprehensive examination--for which a candidate could submit himself whenever in his own estimation he was fully prepared. Such a reduction would eliminate the distraction of compulsory courses in the senior year, and would promote the ideal of self-education: knowledge acquired and mastery attained rather than courses attended. Frederick Thon...