Word: containing
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Because of the wide range of courses and topics covered, a Senior has little idea just what his General Examinations are going to contain, and since he cannot possibly prepare adequately for every possibility, he would rather shift to a field where the requirements are more accurately defined. Unfortunately, however, Biology and Chemistry present their own problems to the premedic because of concentration requirements not designed for pre-medical preparation. As far as Biochemical Sciences itself goes, the honors candidate is fairly well off because of the added advantage of tutorial and extra course requirements, while the student...
...Radcliffe undergraduates should find their own library entirely adequate," the College librarian asserted, pointing out that the Annex bookshelves contain 100,000 volumes, while Lamont will number only 60,000 for almost four times as many users...
...army, was one of the few positive achievements that could be claimed for the Truman Doctrine after a full year. The battle of Mt. Pieria was neither great nor glorious. It was, however, important: for the first time in a year the Greek government forces, instead of trying to "contain" the guerrillas, had taken the offensive. Just as the U.S. had finally begun to crowd the Communists with political moves like the Trieste trump in Italy and General Lucius Clay's tough stand in Germany, so the Greek army was no longer Content to sit back and wait...
Then a Texas aircraft supplier named Leroy H. Luckey told of buying usable World War II bomber engines from the War Assets Administration as scrap, and selling 46 of them to a dealer who shipped them to Russia and Poland. With this, the New York Journal-American could hardly contain itself; it reported that "secret agents from the Kremlin were combing WAA depots...
Some of the volumes will be reserved for well-screened scientists working on AEC projects. But the volumes available to the general public (about 60) will contain information for which U.S. industry and science have been clamoring. During the war many of the nation's best scientists, working at skull-bursting pressure, concentrated on bombmaking. While they were about it, they were forced to solve innumerable lesser problems, which led to various new techniques, machines and instruments...