Word: ruling
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Friday following the fourth Monday after the opening of College in his Sophomore year to any other social club or society which takes in class than 100 members from a College class. The Advisory Committee shall have power to determine what organizations come within the meaning of this rule...
...value of the work accomplished has been acknowledged not only by the unofficial statements of Generals Wood, Edwards, Hoyle, Johnson, and McCain, and Secretary Baker, but also by the attitude of the Government towards the men who completed the course. In spite of the fact that the general rule for the examining boards of the Second Officers' Training Camps was to accept no men under 31 years of age, a special order from the Adjutant General to these boards required that serious consideration be given to all R. O. T. C. applicants for admission; the result was that all members...
...Additional tickets may also be procured at the same time. Office hours, to be announced later, will be kept on Saturday and Sunday for men who are out of town. Seniors must call for their tickets in person; no exceptions will be made to this rule. Seniors are also reminded that no changes will be made in the box lists after 6 o'clock tomorrow...
...diet of man has been the subject for many dissertations, more or less profound, from that early day when the delectable Eve bit into the delectable apple, and found it good. It is a rule established in civilized countries that horses eat oats, men eat bread, and the barnyard fowl eat anything they can get. However, this rule does not hold in the less highly cultured parts of Africa, where, it is rumored, polite society is fond of serpent and other things, nicely browned...
...unformed but not the less foreboding, towards the course of the French Revolution. Already the Czar is held in that dark prison which, with grim satire, is dedicated to two Christian fathers. Already the mobs go up and down the street, shrieking for the liberty they cannot comprehend. The rule of the mob is always terrible, for under it all that is lofty vanishes. If only through the rule of the mob may the rule of the people find stability, then we must consign ourselves to the maxim of the Jesuits, and trust that the end justifies the means...