Word: commenting
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...difficulty in the system at Memorial Hall which has caused considerable comment is the method of counting the weeks as beginning on Wednesday. This is due to the fact that the tables open on this day in the fall, but there seems to be no particular reason for continuing the system during the year. By charging half price for the first half-week, the Hall could start regularly on the Monday following the opening of College, and save a great deal of trouble and expense for the many men who naturally prefer to enter or leave the Hall on Monday...
...Century--Comment on "The Prince of the Power of the Air," by A. G. Bell h.'96; "The Red City," No. V., by S. W. Mitchell h.'86; "The Elephant's Bride," by J. Corbin '92; "The Canals and Oases of Mars," by P. Lowell '76; "Mary Garden," by H. T. Finck...
...record-breaking number of entries for the Leiter Cup baseball series is an emphatic comment on the attitude of the Athletic Committee taken this year in regard to developing Soldiers Field. The Committee has recognized that even by working as fast as possible in laying out fields, it cannot keep up with the increasing demand occasioned by so called scrub sports...
When the Junior Class succeeded in obtaining the Living Room of the Union for its annual dinner, which takes place this evening, much favorable comment was heard on what appeared to be a happy solution of a very considerable problem. The trustees of the Union were eager for it and the committee in charge was equally pleased. It only remained for the class to put a damper on their enthusiasm, which it has carefully done. There should have been twice as many tickets sold as is the case and the time is practically...
Enough communications have been published in the CRIMSON'S columns to show the strength of undergraduate sentiment on the athletic question. For several days we have withheld editorial comment in order to give the University a chance to express itself. Thus far the arguments against athletic curtailment have been well stated, but by necessity very general. The CRIMSON still believes that the Faculty, and not the Athletic Committee, must be the object of our appeals. If the Committee believes that the Faculty has been influenced by the arguments, it may see fit to disregard the recommendations. If the Faculty...