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...track team and other teams to practice at the same time without any interference with each other. The building will be 330 feet seven inches long and 159 feet wide and the area within the track oval will be 259 feet six inches by 118 feet. The structure will correspond with the Lapham Field House architecturally the walls being made of solid brick Flemish bond. The entrance to the Coxe Memorial will be but a few steps from the Lapham Field House and the lockers and showers in the latter will therefore be used in connection with the "cage...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale Field, Scene of Wide Construction Program, is Expecting Brilliant Future | 11/19/1927 | See Source »

...Constant Reader" is the busiest writer to newspapers among U. S. citizens. Other citizens-such as "Vox Populi" and "A Friend"- correspond freely with their editors. Last week another name, not wholly unfamiliar to readers of newspaper letter columns, appeared in the New York Times. This correspondent "ventured a modest demurrer" to a Times editorial belaboring the U. S. tendency to select its college presidents for various educational virtues-but not for scholarship. This correspondent gently pointed to President A. Lawrence Lowell of Harvard; to one-time (1899-1921) President Arthur Twining Hadley of Yale; to William Rainey Harper, first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Arts: Scholar Presidents | 9/5/1927 | See Source »

...proud of TIME-are proud that they are TIME readers. Especially, commend the Foreign News Department and the Chinaman. I have made a detailed study of China and of course, it is flattering to me to see a previous personal opinion expressed in TIME. I should like to correspond with your Chinaman-to know him better. Allow me to second all that Subscriber Sternhart (TIME, July 25), has said. He has, figuratively, taken the words from my mouth. , CHARLES HAMILTON

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: In Necaragua | 8/8/1927 | See Source »

There seems to be only one solution which will adequately take care of the situation. Setting tuition fees to correspond to the actual and complete cost of education is the answer. It is in no sense a new idea but too often it is suggested without its equally necessary corollary. If the tuition is to be raised to cover the expense of instruction, then student loan funds must be established to provide the equality in opportunity for intellectual development now made possible through endowed education or through the wide distribution of expense as in the case of state universities. This...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TWILIGTH OF THE DONORS | 6/17/1927 | See Source »

...result of this change the central board which recommend officials man take a corresponding action and appoint a man who will correspond to Langford but will have more power...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Outsider to Select Officials for 1927 Crimson-Eli Classic | 5/11/1927 | See Source »

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