Word: limitations
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...competition for the cover design on the program of the Club theatricals for 1924. Aspiring artists are requested to meet C. C. Nast '25, the program manager, in Room 1, 5 Linden street, this afternoon at 5 o'clock to learn the details of the competition. A five day limit requires that all designs be submitted by Sunday night. The winner will be elected to the club...
...question whether after admitting the "one seventh" without examination and those who past examinations with an average unquestionably good whether among the remaining candidates there will be enough of sufficient ability to fill up the quota, "so far as it may be advantageously filled." Probably the rule for limitation as now laid down will prove entirely satisfactory as long as among the candidates for admission the percentage of good, average, and poor scholars remains approximately as at present. But it is worthy of note that no provision is made for a different future. Should the percentage of good average scholars...
...football eleven, edited the college paper, won the oratorical contests. There is a tradition that his scholastic standing was second only to that of Aaron Burr in the history of the college. He prepared for the ministry, but would not become ordained because he felt that priesthood would limit his influence.* Almost at once he stepped into a world business - Foreign Missions. Most of his life has been spent as one of the two or three executives of Presbyterian Foreign Missions. His business has led him into almost every country of heathendom...
...much flaunted charge of indifference might almost be charge against the Press at the present time, since it continues to limit its field of publication, and allows outside encroachments. Not every man is interested in such a scholarly work as "The Achievement of Greece," but such works, should they need support, ought to have a patron even at the expense of hob-nobbing with less aristocratic press-mates. There is no need on the other hand of encouraging incipient novelists or poets, but, as has been suggested by the Bulletin, more books of the type of President Lowell's "Public...
This evening's set-to should illustrate the clash of the two different systems, if Coach Wanamaker runs true to form, as the Crimson mentor is almost as certain to pursue his usual scheme of pushing his attack to the limit. Whatever the strategy, the Big Three championship is at stake tonight, and both teams are well aware of the fact