Word: entails
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...hope of the Class Day Committee that the programme they offer this morning, if not generally approved, will at least have the effect of making Seniors consider the questions which a move from the old Tree enclosure entail, and be prepared to assist them with suggestions in the Communication column of the CRIMSON, and at the class meeting Friday evening. As the committee state, the first location which presents itself as a substitute, is the quadrangle back of University, and their experience has been that only when actually investigated are its disadvantages evident. They have also found that few realize...
...periodicals in the Memorial Transept. Some time ago the Corporation voted that the sale of papers in the hall should be stopped entirely, and communicated their decision to the president of the H. D. A., who laid it before the committee. The committee feeling that such a regulation would entail great inconvenience, protested against the vote and proposed a compromise. The Corporation, convinced that a news stand in the Memorial Transept was eminently unfitting, refused to allow its continuance, but gave their consent to the arrangement which the committee have today made public. To wit:- that the Dining Association take...
...seem to us, however, that there are grounds for criticism. It is easy to understand how inappropriate, almost sacrilegious, a news stand in the Memorial Transept must seem to many of those in the generation ahead of the college man of today, and further the new arrangement promises to entail no inconvenience. It will be just as easy to buy inside the door as outside, quite luxurious to have the papers brought to one's table, and those who wish to place orders by the month will still have the opportunity of so doing...
...prove useful in furnishing training, in bringing out the different sides of the question, and at last in ensuring the choice of the best men. These are undoubted advantages, but with them there seems to be a possible disadvantage which must be guarded against. This is that as they entail so much more effort than the single five minute trial of the old system, a number of men may be discouraged from competing in the present trials...
...Pooling would entail great legal difficulties.- (a) Pooling is contrary to Common, Statute and Corporation Law; Redfield, "Law of Corporations"; Texas and Pac. Ry. Co.; 41 La. Ann. 970; 40 Am. and Eng. R. Cas. 475; Stanton V. Allen, 5 Den, (N. Y.) 434; N. Y. R. R. Com. Rep., 1885, p. 77.- (b) Pooling would lead to law-suits between Railroads: ibid.- (c) Pooling increases freight rates beyond statutory limits; Rorer on Inter-State Corporation...