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SSHMKSB H hHH WB&m WBsm w WEBBm n hSSSb d m Kg ^i4 TIE J®!ft.M CRBI^AR tlaiRAKr f. CHS C AG G, w ^S v \~ O Vr-V ^ Ar^vTN. W < ~* t: 2>. V^. SV./ ■m r k.% 'i? : m If |:«S KA v?- mm wi wt k»a ^JSiL lrl,^&J^gfe^.^^^^^^^l Vol. IV. V» No. 6 , * A Uttlbtm of tlGmria Umwraity Catalogue Number Tebituany, 1909 Volume IV. Yd No. 6 HuUrttti nf tUmria Imuf rmtg FOUNDED 1818 FEBRUARY, 1909. Published Bimonthly by the St. Louis University St. Louis, Mo. Entered as second-class matter, May 15th, 1908, at the Post-Office, at St. Louis, Mo., under the Act of July 16th, 1894. ' ; : •• :•; Index Page University Calendar V Board of Trustees 1 Advisory Board 2 Directory 3 Officers and Faculty 4 Register of Students 18 Degrees Conferred 1908 42 General Statement: History, etc 47 Acknowledgments ' 51 Departments 55 School of Medicine: Officers of the Governing Faculty 56 Honorary Board of Directors 57 General Statement 58 Clinical Facilities 60 General Outline of Course 64 Summary of Hours of Work 81 Summer Courses in Medicine 82 Hospital Appointments 83 Entrance Requirements 84 Requirements for Graduation 86 Combined Medical and Academic Course 86 Fees 87 School of Dentistry: Officers and Honorary Board of Directors 88 General Statement 89 Outline of Course 91 Entrance Requirements 98 Requirements for Graduation 98 Athletics 99 Fees i^ 99 Summer Infirmary Course |g£ 99 37?.7 n ^1*371 iv INDEX. Institute of Law: Page History 102 Scheme of Instruction 102 Schools of Instruction 103 Systems of Instruction 103 Entrance Requirements 105 Practice Courts 107 Course of Studies 110 Degrees 118 Tuition and Fees 120 Law Library 121 Scholarships 122 The Faculty 123 Location 124 School of Divinity: Introductory Statement 125 Courses in Theology 126 Canon Law 156 Sacred Scripture 158 Ecclesiastical History 159 School of Philosophy and Science: Introductory Statement 163 Course of Studies 164.
Henry Agard Wallace. (Photo: Department of Commerce)One of the great What if? questions of the 20th century is how America would have been different if Henry Wallace rather than Harry Truman had succeeded Franklin Roosevelt in the White House. Filmmaker Oliver Stone has revived this debate in his current ten-part Showtime series, The Untold History of the United States, and his new book (written with historian Peter Kuznick) of the same name. In the late 1930s and early 1940s, only FDR eclipsed Wallace - Roosevelt's secretary of agriculture (1933-1940) and then his vice president (1941-1944) - in popularity with the American people. Stone's documentary series and book portray Wallace as a true American hero, a visionary on both domestic and foreign policy. Today, however, Wallace is a mostly forgotten figure. If Stone's work helps restore Wallace's rightful place in our history and piques the curiosity of younger Americans to learn more about this fascinating person, it will have served an important purpose. Wallace almost became the nation's president. In 1940, he was FDR's running mate and served as his vice president for four years. But in 1944, against the advice of the Democratic Party's progressives and liberals - including his wife Eleanor - FDR reluctantly allowed the party's conservative, pro-business and segregationist wing to replace Wallace with Sen. Harry Truman as the vice presidential candidate, a move that Stone calls the greatest blunder of Roosevelt's career. Had Wallace remained as vice president, he would have become president when FDR died in April 1945. Wallace opposed the cold war, the arms race with the Soviet Union and racial segregation. He was a strong advocate of labor unions, national health insurance, public works jobs and women's equality. He would have been, without question, the most radical president in American history. He would.
Be the first to know about new publications. Follow publisher Unfollow publisher Southwest Minnesota State University Info Share Spread the word.Share this publication. Stack Organize your favorites into stacks. Like Like this publication. Southwest Minnesota State University 2 years ago Report SMSU Focus is a magazine for the alumni and friends of Southwest Minnesota State University in Marshall, Minnesota, USA. This edition includes the Foundation Annual Report for the Fiscal Year 2012-2013. Related publications.
1933 January February March April May June July August September October November December << April 1933 >> Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30   April 13, 1933: Bonnie and Clyde survive shootout, leave behind photos and evidence April 4, 1933: 73 die in the destruction of the U.S. Navy airship Akron April 8, 1933: State of Western Australia votes to secede from the Commonwealth The following events occurred in April 1933: Contents 1 April 1, 1933 (Saturday) 2 April 2, 1933 (Sunday) 3 April 3, 1933 (Monday) 4 April 4, 1933 (Tuesday) 5 April 5, 1933 (Wednesday) 6 April 6, 1933 (Thursday) 7 April 7, 1933 (Friday) 8 April 8, 1933 (Saturday) 9 April 9, 1933 (Sunday) 10 April 10, 1933 (Monday) 11 April 11, 1933 (Tuesday) 12 April 12, 1933 (Wednesday) 13 April 13, 1933 (Thursday) 14 April 14, 1933 (Friday) 15 April 15, 1933 (Saturday) 16 April 16, 1933 (Sunday) 17 April 17, 1933 (Monday) 18 April 18, 1933 (Tuesday) 19 April 19, 1933 (Wednesday) 20 April 20, 1933 (Thursday) 21 April 21, 1933 (Friday) 22 April 22, 1933 (Saturday) 23 April 23, 1933 (Sunday) 24 April 24, 1933 (Monday) 25 April 25, 1933 (Tuesday) 26 April 26, 1933 (Wednesday) 27 April 27, 1933 (Thursday) 28 April 28, 1933 (Friday) 29 April 29, 1933 (Saturday) 30 April 30, 1933 (Sunday) 31 References April 1, 1933 (Saturday)[edit] The Nazi government organized a one-day boycott of all Jewish-owned businesses in Germany, with the assistance of Julius Streicher, publisher of the anti-Semitic daily newspaper Der Sturmer. The boycott failed to attract public support. Days later, laws were proclaimed to remove German Jews from various occupations.[1] The first squadron of the Indian Air Force was organized.[2] After a motion, for a vote for no confidence against the government of Prime Minister Manopakorn Nititada, was introduced in the Siamese.
Horrifying attack took place at Qianling Wildlife Park in Southwest ChinaChinese news report shows the infant recovering in hospitalMonkey numbers at the zoo have recently exploded from 70 to 500 A mother watched in horror as a monkey tore off one of her eight-month-old baby's testicles at a Chinese zoo before running off and eating it.The shocking incident, is understood to have taken place at the Guiyang Qianling Wildlife Park in Guìyáng, the capital of Guizhou province in Southwest China.The mother was changing the infant's dirty nappy when the animal attacked, ripping off the testicle before dropping it onto the ground.Scroll down for video Horrifying ordeal: Chinese television shows the infant recovering in hospital with his mother after he had his testicle ripped off by a monkey An old man reportedly picked it up but a monkey then snatched it out of his hand before scampering away and eating it before it could be caught. A Chinese news reports shows the baby recovering in a hospital bed with his mother looking over him. His injuries are not life threatening.Monkey numbers at the open zoo have reportedly exploded from around 70 to 500 in recent years with the situation now apparently out of control.   'Eight-month-old's testicle ripped off and eaten by monkey' in. Although they are fed three times a day by keepers, members of the public like to feed the monkeys too and while there are signs warning against doing so, they do not seem to  be enforced.Other footage shows one of the monkeys attacking a little girl, nipping her on the fingers as she reaches over to pet it.The report mentions that the monthly incidents involving the monkeys at Guiyang, of varying degrees of severity, are running in the hundreds.



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