Word: bound
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...reform activities at these large schools in the Midwest are illustrative of the movement which is in force in nearly every college. The new and healthier student governments which are bound to grow up will probably be paralleled by a development of student interest in local, state and national government as well. If such an interest can be fostered in model student governments, they will be well worth the effort which students are now putting into the reformation. --Daily Illini...
...pursuit of his art. While cursing the deity and contemplating suicide, he has learned to read lips so adroitly that he can do it with field glasses. Looking into Central Park, he spies out his fiancee who is engaged in amorous colloquy. She is saying that she feels bound, out of sympathy, to marry Arliss...
...acutely realize what an extraordinary reporter has been serving them these many years. His pictorial reporting of externals is so accurate and satisfying as to have become taken-for-granted. His equally accurate and satisfying reports of what he has observed behind famed faces have a cumulative effect when bound together. They form a most unusual glossary of the first figures of a decade...
...results of today's battle will have an important bearing on the game with Yale next Saturday as the Elis have trounced the New Hampshirites soundly on three occasions and a comparison of scores is bound to have its psychological effect on the team. Harvard this afternoon has the difficult task of playing a game in which there is everything to win and nothing to lose. Victory can only reaffirm the result of the first game while a win by the Indians, desperate from a season of unsweetened defeat and playing on their home ice, have more than an outside...
...Trains bound for New Orleans carried many an extra coach last week. Steamships had full lists. Air passengers coasting down toward the city at twilight saw its bright crescent glittering with extraordinary brilliance. Mississippi Valley farmers, fun-hunters from the North, socialites from the South, soldiers, sailors, beggars, gamblers, sportsmen and bootleggers packed together in broad Canal Street, looked up at huge electric signs forming the letters K O M (Krewe of Momus, Son of Night & Lord of Misrule). By those letters they knew that the Carnival had begun...