Word: formalizes
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...apparent reasons for the variations which exist at present. They would seem to be the result of a lack of supervision and coordination in the College as a whole. Certainly it is unfair for some departments to require twice as much work from their tutors as do other departments. Formal standards, at least, should be the same throughout the College for tutors of equal rank and equal salary...
...still hopes that the Union will eventually obtain a formal closed shop agreement, which the University refused last year in place of a "preferential shop" agreement, according to the terms of which all workers who were hired after it was signed last May must join the union...
...trip that took him through Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina-twelve States in twelve days. He covered 3,524 miles: 2,701 by train, 823 by auto. He entered 57 towns and cities, made 76 appearances and addresses (35 were formal speeches, 41 stop-talks), attended ten State chapter conventions of the National Association of Postmasters, dedicated six new post offices, launched three new postage stamps, * ate publicly six breakfasts, ten luncheons, twelve dinners, two barbecues...
Perhaps it is because the manner in which their formal education was conducted was not the only, nor the chief factor conditioning their philosophies of life. Perhaps the economic factor ... has something to do with their way of thinking...
...status, warned him of "a growing [Protestant] disillusionment which augurs ill for interfaith comity." Last week the Federal Council published the President's reply. Ex-Tycoon Taylor (U. S. Steel), said Mr. Roosevelt, "is in Rome as my special representative. This appointment does not constitute the inauguration of formal diplomatic relations with the Vatican." Both to the Federal Council and the Christian Century these seemed weasel words. Said the Council's executive committee: "The unwarranted interpretation of this appointment . . . has not been explicitly denied." Wrote Editor Morrison: "Mr. Roosevelt will only confirm the opinion now held widely throughout...