Word: allowables
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Yale hopes to admit undergraduates free to all varsity contests. Classes will be rearranged to allow more time for intramural sport, so that the athletic opportunities of the average middleweight undergraduate will be greatly increased...
...Hall announced that the task of forming new rules concerning inter-House dining was entirely in the hands of the House Masters, and though a change is evidently desired by students, no action has been taken on the matter. The most practical plan for liberalization of the rules must allow House members to dine as the guests of friends living in other Houses, and at the same time remove the financial burden which new checks the hospitality of too many students. There must be certain restrictions, a limitation, consonant with the spirit of the House Plan, which will prevent...
Because the present method of placing the burden of the cost on the host is disliked by the House members, and because it may in some degree be harmful to the College, the CRIMSON has advocated that new rulings be adopted. The most attractive plan proposed would allow the guest to sign for his own meals and count them on his own quota. At the same time he would not be permitted to eat more than three meals each week in a House other than his own, and he might be required to pay a small surcharge to cover...
...paternalism, and despite the fact that many Forstmann workers are more skilled, hence higher-paid, than the general run of mill workers, the Forstmann company has not escaped the labor troubles which continually harass the textile trades. In the big Passaic Textile strikes of 1926 Mr. Forstmann refused to allow his workers to join the American Federation of Labor, obtaining a permanent injunction against it. His firm even hinted that the factory would be moved unless its laborers behaved. Weaver Forstmann is proud of the fact that his forefathers signed the roster of the Weavers Guild of Flanders and later...
After a two-week recess to allow Counsel William A. Gray and his investigators to prowl around Wall Street for more data, Senator Peter Norbeck's Banking & Currency Committee last week resumed hearings on the buying & selling practices of U. S. stock exchanges. Having heard a lot about post-crash short-selling (TIME, April 25. et seq.), the Committee now went back to the great pre-crash bull pools...