Word: unites
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Voting will be on a national basis, the country being regarded as a whole for estimating majority and minority. Each electoral region will be regarded as a separate unit for the purpose of allocating seats to successful candidates...
Perhaps the above outline will help you to realise how large a place Yale is, and yet how small; how impersonal, and oh, how intimate; how democratic, and yet how easily divided into small aristocratic social groups. Yale life, with all its complexities, is a unit. A Yale man has something intangible, though valuable, in common with other Yale men. What this intangible character is would be difficult to say. An inheritance of traditions--more perhaps than any other large university in the country; a personality moulded by four years of the Yale curriculum system; a keen sense of competition...
...greatly impressed with the efficiency and business-like air that exists among the members of the Military Science courses in carrying out their duties and with the excellence of the instruction that they receive", declared Colonel L. B. Kromer of the General Staff of the United States Army to a CRIMSON representative after a two-day inspection of the University R. O. T. C. Unit. Colonel Kromer, who has been visiting R. O. T. C. organizations throughout the country, also stated that at no place that he had visited had he seen such earnestness as was shown by the students...
...distributed during the two-year tenure over a billion and a half of adult and child rations speaks for itself. But apart from supplying food, it has provided medicine and surgery in just as notable proportions. Fifteen thousand hospitals have been kept in equipment, and the doctors of the unit are leaving behind them enough supplies to last for six months. Typhus and cholera, two of Russia's great plagues, have been almost stamped out, and trachoma, a third, has been placed largely under control. This last work is reminiscent of the magnificent fight against yellow fever waged by Walter...
...plan, " I do not care to ask Mr. Loree any questions." Two chief difficulties were brought out at the hearing. One is the disposal of the New England roads, which, as a whole, are in poor condition. There was considerable opinion for combining them into a single unit. The other is the question of terminal facilities in New York- whether they should be divided among the systems or consolidated into a single organization independent of all. The Central of New Jersey and the Philadelphia and Reading, for example, are anxious to remain independent of the Baltimore and Ohio, to which...