Word: conducted
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...that we are in the midst of Freshman and Senior elections, the urgency for definite rules governing their conduct becomes once more apparent. Every year those in charge spend unnecessary time and effort in evolving new regulations, whereas permanent rules drawn up by the Student Council would put a stop to the annual bickering and indecision. These are the questions which must be answered and answered in the near future: Who shall be eligible to vote? How shall a ballot be counted that is marked with but one or two preference instead of the required three? What...
...light of these conditions the solution to this problem which we offered over a week ago still seems to us the most logical one. On the one hand it offers, and this is based on more than our own opinion, sufficient conditioning work to conduct the sport safely. On the other hand it preserves that principles upon which the presidents' agreement was founded, preserves it in the face of the defeatist attitude toward this ideal which was so characteristically expressed in one of our contemporary college dailies as "A Noble Experiment That Failed". --Daily Princetonian
David W. Prall, assistant professor of Philosophy, has been appointed Senior Tutor by Kenneth B. Murdock '16, House-Master, to take the place of Allan Evans '24, Instructor in History, Dr. Evans has been Senior Tutor since the House started and has resigned in order to conduct research in the field of medieval history...
With even greater care, Sir Austen went on to scrutinize the Prime Minister's conduct, remarks and policy respecting the Ethiopian Question (TIME, Dec. 30). Of portly, pipe-sucking Mr. Stanley Baldwin's confused statements in the House of Commons on that occasion, austere, hawk-featured Sir Austen Chamberlain concluded at crushing length: "I recall no comparable pronouncement by the head of the Government on a fundamental issue of defense in the 40 years of my parliamentary experience. Is it to be wondered at that some of us who are not alarmists, some...
Rumor of the resignation started last November when attention was called to the fact that the Maestro, nearing 69, had come to find the voyage from Italy tiresome, the routine run of concerts and rehearsals an ever-increasing strain. He will end his U. S. career on April 26, conduct occasionally thereafter, but only in Europe on special occasions...