Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...recent issue of the New York State Bulletin, which is the official organ of "an independent, non-partisan, Statewide civic organization for constructive legislation and responsible and economic government," there is a well-deserved tribute to the services rendered at Albany by Senator Ellwood M. Rabenold '04. The writer of the article pays bomage to Mr. Rabenold's moral earnestness, his personal integrity, his profound grasp of the real problems of state, and his altogether exceptional effectiveness as a speaker. These qualities, one might think, would suffice to make anyone an altogether acceptable Solon. It is not often that...
...always been very fashionable among students to protest against the food served them, and the communication printed yesterday is but the repetition of what has been going on for years. The Freshmen have always protested; last year they even threw eggs at the walls. An Alumni Bulletin printed, in 1804, the diary of a student who stated that the food was so poor that he feared that his parents would never see his face again...
...second should not pass unnoticed. Limiting consideration to one department the absurdity of the claim is evident to all those with memories of the quarters, equipment, and personnel of Biology I. More detailed and saddening points may be found is the recent article of Dr. Barbour in the Alumni Bulletin on "Biology at Harvard". This article, which contains considerable truth, would not lead one to think that Biology was being systematically built up here, bus rather that what remains is the remnant of a more prosperous period of twenty years ago. Are we to suppose that this condition...
Here, in a building which is dedicated, if anything is, to the humanities, hustling young instructors of business administration have rigged up great bulletin boards, on which are posted at regular intervals, commendable--we suppose--samples of advertising matter. Here are flaunted before the eyes of all passers-by, whether they would see them or no, placards for this brand of shoe polish or that type of manure spreader. Glaring in huge type, on highly-colored cardboard, these display cards are an eyesore and an insult to the majority of the students who use the library. However "commendable" they...
...column on Joe Lincoln in your Nov. 10 issue makes no mention of Lincoln's apprenticeship on the old L. A. W. Bulletin and his association with Nixon Waterman. J. FOSTER MOORE...