Word: totting
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Pointing out that the matter of degree requirements was one for "a teacher's judgement," the committee nevertheless called attention to the difficulty, and possible injustice, of requiring otherwise able students tot have had as much as three years of Latin or four of mathematics--often considered the bare min- imum...
...series of talks with fictitious youngsters "Richard & Ivy," Author Herbert dissects piecemeal Parliament's intricate anatomy in a warm, simple, tot-on-each-knee manner. First he winces through the exigencies of being an M.P., describes the House of Lords (". . . Still very useful for correcting mistakes of grammar and spelling . . ."), then leads a bill entitled "Ivy's Christmas Dinner" through labyrinthine Parliamentary procedure...
...Coady can tot up his successes. Now Nova Scotia has 12,500 members in 73 incorporated co-ops and about a dozen unincorporated ones, which do a $6,000,000-a-year business. It has 33,645 members banded together in credit unions, who have lent one another over $9,000,000. In the Maritimes as a whole 100,000 members have joined coops...
Another of the series of interview with newsworthy personalities will be broadcast Monday evening by the Crimson Network when a transcribed session with Mrs. Ruth Lipper, executive secretary tot he late Wendell Willkie, will be presented at 9:15 o'clock...
...British parents sent children to the U.S. for wartime safekeeping without serious qualms-many a troubled family wondered if their pink-cheeked tot could readjust to life in Milwaukee, Wis. or Kennebunk, Me. Last week, as 69 young British war refugees started home again, some of their U.S. foster parents wondered how England would readjust to them. It seemed obvious that some changes would be made when the Empire's small fry got back...