Word: allowable
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...specialization it is no doubt better so. However, as these subsidiary activities have been placed in other hands, the literary monthly has been left with more ample opportunity and attention less distracted to perform functions more important and fundamental, to publish the best of undergraduate writing, to allow the newest generation of authors to try its wings in print, to provide a healthy vent for the ideas and abilities of these aspiring writes, and to subject them and their efforts to a healthy criticism...
...mayor's visit, it is understood, was an entirely friendly one. In refusing cooperation with the local and New York authorities President Lowell emphasized that it is against the policy of the University to allow Harvard athletes to play in a public stadium. The proceeds of the games played in the Stadium in Cambridge go to the support of University athletics. The proposed game at the Yankee Stadium, it was pointed out, would tend to commercialize college football. While in sympathy with the movement to relieve the unemployed, officials of the Athletic Association felt that nothing could be spared from...
Following Hollywood's present trend away from factory methods of cinemanu-facture, Warner Bros, have also "discontinued mass production." For the next year, Warner Bros, plan to produce no more than four pictures at a time (six months ago, 19 pictures were being produced simultaneously), to allow four to six weeks of rehearsal for every picture...
...again flowed last week from some 1,800 wells in the great sprawling East Texas field. It did not gush immoderately but poured out in a legally limited stream. After 19 days Governor Sterling lifted martial law in four counties to allow the State Railroad Commission to apply a new proration order to an area that almost ruined mid-continent fields with low prices (TIME, Aug 31 et ante). Each East Texas well was allowed to run off not more than 225 bbl. per day.* The Commission's order was expected to cut in half the field...
...residential and business districts. Because of Churchill's subarctic winters most of the inhabitants will live in small apartment houses heated from a central station. Special arrangements for water supply and sewage disposal will have to be made. To prevent famine and plague, the Canadian Government will not allow any settlers until next year when the building will be well under way. With the first freezing of the harbor this year, Churchill's present population must move...