Word: ia
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...ebullient editor was marked "IA" by his draft board, and overnight the U.S. had its screwiest Selective Service case of World War II. The editor was voluble Ralph McAllister Ingersoll of crusading, neurojournalistic PM. And the rumpus he kicked up could have happened only in Manhattan...
...Graduate School of Business Administration James L. Rollins has been appointed Assistant Dean. He received his A. B. degree from Buenavista College, Ia., in 1926 and for two years did special graduate work at Northwestern University. He also served there as Assistant Dean of Men until 1936. At that time he was named Director of Dormitories and Member of the Board of Personnel Administration. From 1939 until 1942 he acted us director of dining halls and dormitories. At Harvard he will be in charge of the physical plant at the Business School...
...addition of new courses but only the omission of half-a-dozen peace-time courses which offered little of current interest to our students. Besides reconstructing our courses in that way, the Faculty did two things last March and April. They set up the 12-months IA (Industrial Administration) course, to accelerate our training for the war industries job, and voted unanimously to go on a 12-months basis without increased compensation for the duration...
...From the standpoint of you men, if you went a complete training for business it will be necessary to come back after the war. Certainly most men in the IA course will want to supplement their training here or get it somewhere else, either by experience or by going to some other School. We do not represent the training we are giving now as our ideal of business training for peace-time
...blinked, ducked in terror when photographers' flashlights blazed in her face. With imperial MacArthurian self-possession, Arthur marched with his mother through the generals and the crowd to a car where 6-ft. 3-in. Sergeant Donald Broe, of Waterloo, Ia., proudly waited to drive the General behind the four-starred flag on the hood. But the General stayed behind, followed later in a car with the two-starred flag of a major general. In the crowd, General MacArthur spotted Press Officer Lloyd Lehrbas, who covered Washington affairs for the Associated Press when MacArthur was Chief of Staff...