Word: distinctively
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...seems to me that in the wording of the questionnaire for the prohibition vote to be taken Monday the drys are at a distinct disadvantage. The proposals of the wets are given the suggestive publicity of specific questions. The proposals of the drys, such as the substitution of imprisonment for fine as penalty for violation, trial without the encumbrance of a jury, increase in the number of enforcement officials, and the like, are not directly mentioned. The CRIMSON article of May third states that those who vote in the affirmative on the third question will do so with the understanding...
Leaders of the strikers denied last night the rumor that the action was in any way inspired by sympathy with the recent action of the British Trades Union Congress leaders. They regard the local action as one entirely distinct from the more important national crisis in Great Britain. Their newly formed union acknowledges no affiliations of any sort with any national trade union. No action has as yet been taken by the CRIMSON to organize a volunteer corps of newsboys to meet the emergency, and last night it was the opinion of both sides that some sort of compromise...
...begin to see why the boys recommended this. Imagine how superior one would feel to know his apparatus--I suppose it has something to do with--well I really am not quite sure what it has to do with. But it sounds very easy. Though folk dancing has a distinct lure for me. I have ever been enamoured of the May pole, though vicariously. I really am not that kind--not quite pastoral...
...votes of the College, Faculty, Law School, and Medical School will be kept distinct from each other. The votes of other graduate schools will be recorded under one total. In order to facilitate this distinction white ballots will be used for undergraduates, yellow ones for Law students, blue for Medical students, and red for members of the other graduate schools. The Faculty vote will be distinguished by the use of postal ballots...
...more we study the history of the ancient Far East, the more we see that Chinese civilization, in spite of the fact that it has developed along its own lines and has an entirely distinct character, has, nevertheless, not been secluded and entirely cut off from the rest of the ancient world," declared Professor Paul Pelliot, who recently gave a series of lectures on Neolithic Art in Northern China at the Fogg Museum, in a special interview with the CRIMSON...