Word: public
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Seventeen undergraduates leave early this morning for Princeton to join in the five round-table discussions at the fourth annual Harvard-Yale-Princeton Conference on Public Affairs, which begins this noon with a luncheon address by President Dodds...
Word has come from Princeton that in addition to Senators Sherman Minton and Millard E. Tydings, Senator Robert Reynolds of North Carolina has accepted the invitation to attend the two days of conferences. Dr. George Gallup, noted scientific sampling expert and Director of the Gallup Institute for Public Research, has also signified his desire to attend. He will participate in Table V, on Pressure Groups in a Democracy...
Although the three undergraduate dailies, the CRIMSON, the Yale News and the Princetonian have gathered a stellar group of men prominent in public life, the discussions will be treated "off the record" in the news columns so that student and faculty participants may benefit thereby...
Robert Moses, Commissioner of Parks for New York City, will speak this afternoon at the New Lecture Hall under the auspices of the Godkin Lecture Foundation. The talk, which is to be open to the public will begin at 4:00 o'clock...
...grants from a federal fund and still refrain from interference with local policy. To tax one part of the country in order to support the schools of another may be a breach of state autonomy, but it is the only means of preserving to rural America a vestige of public education. The Southeast cannot support schools of the standard set elsewhere. In 1930 its farm population included 13 per cent of the nation's children, but its farmers produced only two per cent of the nation's income. If the youth of rural America are to have equality in education...