Word: sanctioned
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...Holyoke in the spring of 1900, and it is claimed by Yale that these were open games. The Diocesan Union, however, has for several years given an annual meet, open only to its own members. These meets have always been considered closed by the New England A.A.U., but the sanction for the meet in 1900 was made out for an open meet because of a misunderstanding. Yale now has that sanction as evidence, but to meet it there is a statement from the New England A. A. U., that it considers the games closed. An argument against allowing the protest...
...committee for investigating the advisability of moving the Trophy Room from its present location to the Union decided in favor of moving. Their decision was handed to the Athletic Committee for its sanction, but at a meeting held last Wednesday the matter was laid on the table indefinitely. Unless this decision is altered at some future meeting, no further action will be taken in the matter by the Trophy Room Committee...
There has never been a time, he said, when earnest men were so intent upon finding religious ideals and religious sanction for their work. In no better way can men form such ideals and reach religious opinions than by free discussion of religious questions from different points of view. For such serious and helpful discussion this Union offers the greatest opportunity...
...Concerning the conditions of the progress of the Standard Oil Company, one must say: they have no rational sanction which can decide ultimate judgment; they were simply inevitable...
...Marshall who established in unquestioned integrity the position of the judiciary as co-ordinate with and equal to the legislative branches of the government, and made the Supreme Court recognized as the power qualified to sanction or veto legislative acts. He laid down for all time the fundamental considerations which fix and govern the relative functions of the nation and the States, he defined the powers of the legislatures, and made clear the conception and theory of the American doctrine of constitutional law. He was not overweening in his assumption of the power of the court, but, on the other...