Word: omitting
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...Peace Strike indicate that it will not place "undue emphasis . . . upon the problems that confront labor." It is bad taste to speak of a professor from another great university as "haranguing" an audience, before the fact; it is simply misrepresentation to describe Professor Lovett as you have, and to omit all reference to the meeting at Harvard. In behalf of good journalism and its own self-respect, the "Crimson" should correct the inaccuracies left in the minds of its readers by this editorial. W. N. Chambers...
...Majesty is being spared "fatiguing public appearances." Chicago Tribune's David Darrah and United Press's Dan Rogers broke stories that the Archbishop of Canterbury is slashing the Coronation Service right & left in efforts to get it as short and unfatiguing as possible, has decided to omit the sermon, hopes to telescope the ritual from a service normally of about four hours' duration into one, starting at the Abbey at 11 a. m., with the King out of the Abbey by 1:30 and back in Buckingham Palace...
...Stadium and there will be no place in which to hold an open practice except the usual Varsity field. Due to the short time before dark and the fact that spectators have so little room to move around in on the Varsity practice field, Coach Harlow decided to omit the usual open session. He definitely promised, however, to open the Friday workout to bursarscardholders before the Navy and Yale games...
...running expenses of the Government under the Hoover Administration were about 3⅔; billions a year. The New Deal reports ordinary expenditures, exclusive of relief and recovery, of less than 4 billions a year. In order to do so it has juggled its bookkeeping. One trick is to omit from the totals such items as pay ments to trust funds, certain District of Columbia expenditures, half the annual sinking fund payment for the Soldiers' Bonus. These items are furtively listed only in the appendix of the budget report. The apparent saving from this source has been...
...fashions; . . . neither shall it be Lawfull for any to weare Long Hair Locks or foretopps nor to use curling, crissing, parting, or powdering their Haire." The College authorities, though they might have been tempted by the crew hair cut to a modern corollary of this law, saw fit to omit the mention of any such regulation in the Parietal Rules of 1936! But it is our purpose to discuss, in the light of past experiences and future experiments, some of Harvard's more serious recent changes...