Word: viewings
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Applications for both these games close tomorrow at 6 o'clock. In view of the great number of undergraduates who have yet to apply between now and tomorrow evening, C. F. Getchel, general manager of the H. A. A., urges all students to apply as early as possible today, thus avoiding the last minute rush...
...decision among hosts of undergraduates to devote only a compulsory minimum of time to their studies and lavish the remainder upon outside activities. He makes the plausible statement that the prepondering majority of college students have not the capacity to pursue bookish knowledge. Certainly there is support for this view, but there is also an increasing body of evidence that the development of such a capacity is not beyond a very large proportion of those who now prefer a life of stereotyped activity...
...prospective listener of what it is to be about. Two groups of lecturers are this of necessity excluded from mention; those whose lectures are of real value only if attended consecutively and those who cannot tell the titles of their lectures in advance. As representative of the point of view of this latter group, the Vagabond quotes from a letter in his files from one of the most distinguished professors at Harvard...
...Senator Walsh last winter in which the Inquisitor had said: "I am unable to understand how the Government can escape the obligation to renew the contract. . . ." Dr. Work apparently ignored or failed to comprehend the whole import of what Senator Walsh had said. For Senator Walsh had qualified his view that the option was inescapable, by saying: ". . . except it [the U. S.] treats it [the lease] as void or voidable." Senator Walsh's opinion at that time was tentative. Further investigation of the Salt Creek affair was in store and Senator Walsh further said: "I have not been able...
...junior attorney, further trained through holding offices as mayor, judge and state senator in South Dakota. In June 1927, when Sinclair served notice of his intention of exercising his option. Dr. Work asked Solicitor Patterson to study the Sinclair lease. Solicitor Patterson at that time took the view "that Fall rejected all the bids under the advertisement and negotiated a private sale not covered by the advertisement, as he had a right to do." To this view Solicitor Patterson stuck last spring. Last week, he said: "It's a matter of legal interpretation The Attorney General took one view...