Word: term
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...increase plannedFar Eastern Languages Small classes provide teacher-student relationshipThe Fine Arts Questionnaire not yet receivedGeology and Geography None Tutorial not necessaryGermanic Languages Honors Seniors and as much other tutorial as possible Favor full-scale tutorialGovernment Honors Seniors, Juniors above Group IV, and Sophomores for one term Favor "full tutorial at full level permitted by faculty vote"History Maximum allowed, except for Sophomores No departmental view givenIndic Philology Questionnaire not yet answeredMathematics Honors Juniors and Seniors Tutorial at limit set by regulationsMineralogy Questionnaire not yet receivedMusic "Basic Piano" and Tutorial for Honors Seniors Basic Piano is still experimentalPhilosophy Questionnaire...
Scholarships totalling $540 went to 15 needy University undergraduates last night as the Student Council voted the largest amount in its history to aid students in financial straights in meeting their term bills...
...receiving grants were selected as the most worthy out of a field of 25 applicants interviewed by Council members Robert D. Cross '45 and Edric A. Weld, Jr '46 prior to Spring vacation. The Council laid plans for further scholarships pending the issue of final Spring term bills...
...keep from pulling the boners which kept him in continual hot water for the first year and a half of his term, Harry Truman now never makes a decision the first time an important problem is brought to him. The question first goes for study to his four-man staff: Adviser Clark Clifford, Assistant John Steelman (still a White House big shot despite his labor bobbles), Secretaries Charlie Ross (press) and Matt Connelly (agenda). Clifford decides what Cabinet officers or other Administration officials should be called in for consultation, sets up a special subcommittee to chew on the problem. Major...
Klaus netted an average of 150 marks a day, which might buy a pack of Luckies or all the food on his ration card for one month plus his room rent, or one term's worth of legal training at the University. When professional coal thieves moved in from Hamburg (where competition had grown too heavy and the police too strict), he had a little trouble. The newcomers, working in large groups at freight yards, netted several tons a night and sold them through a central organization at fixed prices. They disliked small-time operators like Klaus, who undersold...