Word: recommendations
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...list of names which the Student Council voted to recommend to the Athletic Committee to be awarded their football "H" for participation in the Yale game should be added R. S. Hubbard '24, J. J. Lee '24, L. B. Lockwood '24, J. C. McGlone '26, K. S. Pfaffmann '24, and Philip Spalding '25. The Council also recommended an "B" for J. H. Sherburne '24, Manager of football, and Freshman numerals to J. R. Burke '27, Freshman Manager, and to F. V. Field '27, Assistant Freshman Manager of football...
...made certain during the week that the moment the Conservative Government is defeated in the House of Commons, Premier Baldwin will recommend the King to ask Mr. Ramsay MacDonald, leader of the Labor Party, to form a new ministry. It is no exaggeration to say that Great Britain is, in general terms, philosophically resigned to having a Labor Government...
Muscle Shoals?"The Government is undertaking to develop a great water power project known as Muscle Shoals, on which it has expended many million dollars. The work is still going on. Subject to the right to retake in time of war, I recommend that this property with a location for auxiliary steam plant and rights of way be sold. . . . The agriculture of the nation needs a greater supply and lower cost of fertilizer. ... If this main object be accomplished, the amount of money received for the property is not a primary or major consideration. . . . I, therefore, recommend that the Congress...
...domestic policy is evidently the President's surest ground. The statement of our foreign policy is comparatively relegated to the background and treated in terms not so clear. For instance the World Court question is mixed up with the Hague Court, which has not had success enough to recommend it very highly; and it is recommended with "the proposed reservations," reservations never very clearly understood. As for the League of Nations, all the high-sounding phrases at the close regarding our responsibility in giving the world a more practical use of "our moral power" do not dispel the questionableness...
...Failures. Even the indomitable (and well merited) loyalty of the metropolitan critics to the Theatre Guild could not be stretched to recommend this play without serious reservations. It has all the virtues and most of the glaring faults of an experiment. The author is H. R. Lenormand, one of a small group of French writers who have been striving for years to break away from the conventional. He has broken away. But he has damaged his product in the struggle...