Word: lacking
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Dates: during 1930-1930
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...growth of the Cambridge School of the Drama has been gratifying to all those interested in the renaissance of dramatic instruction at Harvard. There have been many difficulties encountered and successfully overcome which have arisen from the awkward nature of dramatic expression. The lack of funds, however, has been the chief drawback to the development of the school, and with the situation now much better in this respect there is every reason to expect a substantial increase in the facilities for production and teaching...
...University captain, to fill the place of C.D. Newhart, who did not return to College this year, will be elected after a few days. Among the University candidates there is a great lack of material in the heavyweight classes, while among the Freshmen who have been practicing informally, there is a lack of lightweight material...
...Tilton's speech came during the first day's session, which was announced as a conference between the A. N. A. and Government officials. Secretary of Com merce Lamont made a speech in which he deplored "a very great lack of knowledge on the part of our people generally of the Department [of Commerce] and its organization and what it has to offer in the way of exact information on almost every phase of business, every industry from all over the world...
...consulting physician here who is available at the office for one hour in the morning and one hour in the afternoon. On the two occasions I had to visit the office, I found a crowd of some twenty to thirty students, most of them forced to stand, because of lack of chairs, for an hour or thereabouts. Upon inquiry, I found this to be a very common occurence. Despite the fact that, theoretically, three physicians are available by appointment during the day, a college the size of Harvard requires several physicians in attendance all day long. A good number...
...Protestant Episcopal Church League, unanimously through its executive committee and advisory council, ordered its Secretary Dr. Alexander Griswold Cummins* of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., to denounce: "... Amazing lack of scholarship. . . . The simple fact is, that in defiance of every scrap of historical evidence, about which, in reality, there is not the slightest ambiguity, he [Bishop Manning] faithfully follows a tradition which took its origin not from Jesus