Word: exceed
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Sect. 1. The annual dues for an active member shall not exceed ten dollars; for an associate member THE DUES SHALL NOT EXCEED THREE DOLLARS. THE EXACT AMOUNTS OF ALL ANNUAL DUES SHALL BE FIXED BY THE GOVERNING BOARD SUBJECT TO THE APPROVAL OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES...
VIII. Dues. Section 1. The annual dues for an active member shall not exceed ten dollars; for an associate member the dues shall not exceed five dollars; and for a none-resident member the dues shall not exceed three dollars. The exact amounts of all annual dues shall be fixed by the Governing Board subject to the approval of the Board of Trustees. Section 2. Active, Associate and Nonresident memberships shall expire two months after the end of the fiscal year for which dues were paid...
...composition shall be written in four voices (soprano, alto, tenor, and bass), for chorus, with or without solo voices, and with organ or piano accompaniment; and the time required for its performance must not exceed six minutes. The words shall be either English or Latin, religious or secular, original or selected. A prize will be awarded only in case a composition is submitted which fulfills the requirements of the committee. The prize composition will be performed in Appleton Chapel with chorus and organ, under the direction of Mr. W. A. Locke '69. Compositions must be presented to the chairman...
...class and Sheffield teas were given. In the evening the Musical Clubs gave their annual concert, and following this, Germans were given by the several classes and at the Sheffield club houses. The festivities will be brought to a close this evening with the Promenade itself which promises to exceed all previous ones. The 1907 committee is as follows: C. Sumner, chairman, W. McC. Blair, T. P. Dixon, R. E. Danielson, H. P. Fabian, C. Truesdale, S. F. B. Morse, H. H. Woolsey, and E. L. Pratt. The Sheffield representatives on the committee are R. C. Tripp and K. Behr...
...destroy reverence, but increases it in an altered form. The democratic reverence is not a reverence for symbols, but for the facts behind the symbols; an estimate of the true value. The great movement of the world today is towards democracy, which one hundred years from today will exceed any present conception. If the democracy of this great country is to be sound, our commerce and society must be of sound character. Critics have said, that democracy is inconsistent with the finest characteristics of past ages...