Word: depending
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...apply, in writing at 4 University Hall, not later than 5 o'clock on Wednesday, June 15, for not more than three tickets for the use of friends to the exercises in Sever Quadrangle on Commencement morning. The actual number of tickets issued will necessarily depend upon the number of applications. It is hoped that three tickets may be issued to each applicant...
Melvin Alvah Traylor, President, American Bankers' Association, to Alabama Bankers' Association convention at Birmingham: "In former years when it was difficult for people living in outlying communities to get to larger centres, and many towns and villages in sparsely settled regions had to depend more or less upon their own resources, small and under capitalized banks may have been a necessity. At the present time there is no such excuse. The automobile has made it possible for even distant towns to keep in close touch with larger centres and there is no justification, in my opinion...
Livingston Hall 3L, whose position as head of the Law School student advisors has brought him into close contact with the needs of the Law School students, said that the new dining hall, if erected, should find support among these students, though its ultimate success would depend more on the quality of the food served than on the general need felt...
...third attempt to ascertain the will of students whom the hall would serve is less liable to abortion. It does not depend, like the club tables of the Union, upon laborious and unlikely experiment nor, like the petition, is it being given a limited circulation. Pledge cards are being sent to all members of the University except Seniors and students in the medical and business schools whose peculiar circumstances place them apart...
...made of rubber bands. Tension is applied to the shock cord and, on a given signal, the glider is flipped suddenly into the air like a pebble from a slingshot. An automatic release hook then drops the shock cord. Once in the air, the pilot of a glider must depend on air currents. Usually he circles around a hill, taking advantage of swirling gusts of wind to gain altitude and maintain flying speed. He must know his air pockets better than any motor-propelled aviator.. Landing is difficult; but not dangerous, because the glider is neither heavy nor swift...