Word: explicitly
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...most explicit answer to the riddle of the Union's four-year decline in membership is, however, that up to within very recent years, it was impressed on the mind of every Freshman that he not only ought not but could not keep house without a Union membership. The habit was formed in cubdom, and persisted. This zeal, it is understood, has been abated, with the above result. Yet the plan of admitting the Union membership fee as an item on the term bill--which means that the bill comes not out of my allowance but out of father...
...applications from Juniors for rooms in Hollis, Holworthy and Stoughton for next year must be left at the Bursar's office before 1 o'clock today. Explicit rules for filing the applications, are printed on the back of each blank, and no blank which is not properly filed will be considered. College rules do not allow leases to be cancelled or shifted except where men are obliged to give up their rooms for imperative and inevitable reasons. The allotment will be made tomorrow and the results announced in Friday's CRIMSON. A waiting list will be arranged for those...
...summing up, Mr. Murray said that the races which built up Homer, at length outgrew him, but that the end of the epoch was not a mere cessation, but a change to a language less beautiful, but more explicit...
...been felt that perhaps the notice about the Class Fund published in last Thursday's CRIMSON, was not explicit enough. The subscriptions, up to the present time, are considerably behind the records of previous classes, both in number and amount. For instance, in the class of 1904 there were 147 men who gave subscriptions of $50 each. The class of 1907 is fully capable of doing more than that, though up to the present date, there have not been one quarter as many subscriptions of that size. It is earnestly hoped that a large number of men will subscribe generously...
...York can purchase these roads at a reasonable price on well settled constitutional and legal principles which have received their exposition in a long line of cases, that of the Long Island Water Supply Co. vs. Brooklyn, being a typical one. Here it was held in clear and explicit terms, that the basis of value of a public service company, when taken for a public use, was not the stocks and bonds, nor the great profits, nor the cost of construction and equipment as reckoned by the company, but was the value of the property as a going concern. This...