Word: limiteds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...CRIMSON's latest editorial on beer does not do much to clarify the situation, either. You say: "Why this (the 21-year age limit) was never extended to a beverage admittedly non-intoxicating must remain ever locked in the Broasts of the Massachusetts Legislature." The point is that since the coming of Repeal, 3.2 beer has c to exist. The beer contemplated by the present legislation is full strength beer running up to 12 per cent, and it is admittedly intoxicating...
...barriers, the most obstinate has been the twenty-one year age limit. Why this was extended to a beverage admittedly non-intoxicating must remain ever locked in the breasts of the Massachusetts legislature. But as it stands, it would permit beer in the houses only if separate tables were set up for those over twenty-one, and all others were rigidly barred from them by the dining hall administration. Little imagination is required to see that this would be an awkward and an undesirable rule; the spectacle of a headwaitress making discreet inquiries of even the least of her wards...
...opinion were united, and pressure put on University Hall through the housemasters, it might be driven to admit that 3.2 beer with meals was a privilege which Harvard is certainly adult enough to claim, and to suggest this to the Massachusetts legislature. A simple amendment of the beer age limit from twenty-one to eighteen would be nothing but a legal acknowledgment of a plain fact. Even the Massachusetts legislature cannot remain forever so far from the walks of men, and so remote from their habits; with a little encouragement from the University, they would be willing to amend their...
...will lay you a wager of one year's subscription for TIME for each member of this year's undefeated, untied Princeton freshman team that you are wrong. We will limit the number of subscriptions to 22 and one for Johnny Gorman, their coach...
...Towers are allowed in New York without limit of height provided the occupy not more than one-quarter of the lot," he continued. "When zoning was first adopted it was thought that towers would be exceptional. They were favored in the zoning plan because if well handled architecturally they produced an interesting instead of a monotonons skyline...