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...league could stay at 11 or expand to 12 teams or more. ECAC officials have yet to speak publicly about potential applicants, but the list of candidates has been widely reported to include Niagara (CHA), Holy Cross (Atlantic Hockey) and Quinnipiac (Atlantic Hockey...

Author: By Jon PAUL Morosi, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Leaman All Business in Return to HarvardLeaman All Business in Return to Harvard | 2/13/2004 | See Source »

...University already looking to expand its rank and size, the continued presence of senior professors has contributed to ongoing concerns over space within...

Author: By Rebecca D. O’brien, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: As Professors Delay Retirement, Office Space in FAS Remains Tight | 2/12/2004 | See Source »

...filling in the pool-side bleachers and even removing most of the long walls between practice rooms that are now used for varsity teams. But in the short run—especially given the Allston variable—the University’s immediate goal should be simply to expand popular services as much as possible without embarking on prohibitively expensive structural changes to the building. That is, keeping in mind the limitations above, administrators should optimize use of the space we have, more or less as it is currently constructed...

Author: By Matthew W. Mahan, | Title: A Better MAC at Our Fingertips | 2/6/2004 | See Source »

Second, the University should expand the size of the MAC’s free weights room and the machine room by a third or more by removing the small wall—roughly 25 feet long—between those rooms and the men’s and the women’s locker rooms. The displaced locker space could be moved farther back into the underutilized drying rooms or simply consolidated...

Author: By Matthew W. Mahan, | Title: A Better MAC at Our Fingertips | 2/6/2004 | See Source »

These four changes would substantially expand the most popular aspects of the facility, thereby reducing unsafe crowding and enabling the MAC to better serve the entire campus until more far-reaching solutions can be implemented. The MAC has long been a serious quality of life issue at Harvard and the administration is doing a great disservice to our community by waiting for the perfect moment to undertake a fix-all, $30 million renovation. By the time that moment rolls around, half of our campus may be over in Allston anyway. This plan should be pursued because it is cost-effective...

Author: By Matthew W. Mahan, | Title: A Better MAC at Our Fingertips | 2/6/2004 | See Source »

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